US20020195966A1 - Drive circuit, display device, and driving method - Google Patents

Drive circuit, display device, and driving method Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20020195966A1
US20020195966A1 US10/167,666 US16766602A US2002195966A1 US 20020195966 A1 US20020195966 A1 US 20020195966A1 US 16766602 A US16766602 A US 16766602A US 2002195966 A1 US2002195966 A1 US 2002195966A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
level
driving
slot
driving waveform
waveform
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
US10/167,666
Other versions
US6995516B2 (en
Inventor
Tadashi Aoki
Kazunori Katakura
Aoji Isono
Kazuhiko Murayama
Kenji Shino
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Canon Inc
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Assigned to CANON KABUSHIKI KAISHA reassignment CANON KABUSHIKI KAISHA ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: AOKI, TADASHI, SHINO, KENJI, ISONO, AOJI, MURAYAMA, KAZUHIKO, KATAKURA, KAZUNORI
Publication of US20020195966A1 publication Critical patent/US20020195966A1/en
Priority to US11/264,162 priority Critical patent/US7573472B2/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US6995516B2 publication Critical patent/US6995516B2/en
Adjusted expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Fee Related legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09GARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
    • G09G3/00Control arrangements or circuits, of interest only in connection with visual indicators other than cathode-ray tubes
    • G09G3/20Control arrangements or circuits, of interest only in connection with visual indicators other than cathode-ray tubes for presentation of an assembly of a number of characters, e.g. a page, by composing the assembly by combination of individual elements arranged in a matrix no fixed position being assigned to or needed to be assigned to the individual characters or partial characters
    • G09G3/2007Display of intermediate tones
    • G09G3/2011Display of intermediate tones by amplitude modulation
    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09GARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
    • G09G3/00Control arrangements or circuits, of interest only in connection with visual indicators other than cathode-ray tubes
    • G09G3/20Control arrangements or circuits, of interest only in connection with visual indicators other than cathode-ray tubes for presentation of an assembly of a number of characters, e.g. a page, by composing the assembly by combination of individual elements arranged in a matrix no fixed position being assigned to or needed to be assigned to the individual characters or partial characters
    • G09G3/22Control arrangements or circuits, of interest only in connection with visual indicators other than cathode-ray tubes for presentation of an assembly of a number of characters, e.g. a page, by composing the assembly by combination of individual elements arranged in a matrix no fixed position being assigned to or needed to be assigned to the individual characters or partial characters using controlled light sources
    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09GARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
    • G09G5/00Control arrangements or circuits for visual indicators common to cathode-ray tube indicators and other visual indicators
    • G09G5/10Intensity circuits
    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09GARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
    • G09G2310/00Command of the display device
    • G09G2310/06Details of flat display driving waveforms
    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09GARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
    • G09G3/00Control arrangements or circuits, of interest only in connection with visual indicators other than cathode-ray tubes
    • G09G3/20Control arrangements or circuits, of interest only in connection with visual indicators other than cathode-ray tubes for presentation of an assembly of a number of characters, e.g. a page, by composing the assembly by combination of individual elements arranged in a matrix no fixed position being assigned to or needed to be assigned to the individual characters or partial characters
    • G09G3/2007Display of intermediate tones
    • G09G3/2018Display of intermediate tones by time modulation using two or more time intervals

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a drive circuit for generating a driving waveform corresponding to brightness data; a display device therewith; a driving method for generating the driving waveform; and more specifically to a method of driving a light-emitting device in an image display device provided with an image display panel having the matrix wiring of a plurality of light-emitting devices.
  • a hot cathode device for example, a surface conduction electron-emitting device, a field emission type device (hereafter, an FE type device), a metal/insulating film/metal type discharge device (hereafter, an MIM type device), etc. are known.
  • a surface conduction electron-emitting device for example, a device disclosed in an article of “M. I. Elinson, Radio Eng., Electron Phys., 10,1290 (1965)”, and other examples described later are known.
  • a surface conduction electron-emitting device uses a phenomenon that electron emission occurring by letting a current in a thin film with a small area, which is formed on a substrate, in parallel with a film surface.
  • this surface conduction electron-emitting device besides the device by Elinson et al. where an SnO 2 thin film is used, a device consisting of an Au thin film (G. Dittmer: Thin Solid Films, 9,317 (1972)), a device consisting of In 2 O 3 /SnO 2 thin film (M. Hartwell and C. G. Fonstad: IEEE Trans. ED Conf., 519 (1975)), a device consisting of a carbon thin film (Hisashi Araki, et al.: Vacuum, 26th volume, No. 1, 22 (1983)), and the like were reported.
  • FIG. 28 a plan of the above-mentioned device by M. Hartwell et al. is shown in FIG. 28.
  • reference numeral 3001 denotes a substrate and numeral 3004 denotes an electro conductive thin film made of metallic oxide formed by sputtering.
  • the electro conductive thin film 3004 is formed in H-shaped plane geometry as shown in the figure.
  • An electron emission part 3005 is formed by performing the energization processing which is called below-mentioned energization forming, to this electro conductive thin film 3004 .
  • a gap L in the figure is set within 0.5 and 1 mm, and w is set at 0.1 mm.
  • the electron emission unit 3005 is shown in rectangular geometry in the center of the electro conductive thin film 3004 from convenience of illustration, this is schematic and is not necessarily expressing the location or geometry of an actual electron emission unit faithfully.
  • the energization forming means to form the electron emission unit 3005 in a highly resistive state electrically by applying a fixed DC voltage or, for example, a DC voltage, which increases at a very slow rate which is about 1 V/min, to both ends of the electro conductive thin film 3004 , to locally break or deform the electro conductive thin film 3004 , or to change its quality.
  • a crack arises in a portion of the electro conductive thin film 3004 which is locally broken, deformed or changed in quality.
  • a proper voltage is applied to the electro conductive thin film 3004 after the above-described energization forming, electron emission occurs near the above-described crack.
  • FIG. 29 a sectional view of the above-mentioned device by C. A. Spindt et al. is shown in FIG. 29.
  • reference numeral 3010 denotes a substrate
  • numeral 3011 does emitter wiring made of conductive material
  • numeral 3012 does an emitter cone
  • numeral 3013 does an insulating layer
  • numeral 3014 does a gate electrode.
  • This device makes field emission occur from an end portion of the emitter cone 3012 by applying a proper voltage between the emitter cone 3012 and gate electrode 3014 .
  • FIG. 30 A typical example of the device structure of an MIM type device is shown in FIG. 30.
  • reference numeral 3020 denotes a substrate
  • numeral 3021 does a lower electrode made of metal
  • numeral 3022 does a thin insulating layer with the thickness of about 100 ⁇
  • numeral 3023 does an upper electrode made of metal with the thickness of about 80 to 300 ⁇ .
  • electron emission is made to occur from a surface of the upper electrode 3023 by applying a proper voltage between the upper electrode 3023 and lower electrode 3021 .
  • the above-described cold cathode device can obtain electron emission at low temperature in comparison with a hot cathode device, it does not need a heater for heating. Hence, since its structure is simpler than that of a hot cathode device, it is possible to produce a fine device. In addition, even if plenty of devices are arranged in high density on a substrate, it is seldom to generate problems such as a thermofusion of a substrate. Moreover, differently from slow response speed of a hot cathode device due to an action by the heating of a heater, the cold cathode device also has an advantage that response speed is quick. For this reason, researches for applying a cold cathode device have been done actively.
  • a surface conduction electron-emitting device has an advantage that plenty of devices can be formed over a large area since the surface conduction electron-emitting device is simple in structure and is easily produced. Then, as disclosed in, for example, Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 64-31332 applied by the present applicant, methods for arranging and driving many devices have been studied. In addition, as for the application of surface conduction electron-emitting devices, image formation apparatuses such as an image display unit and an image recording device, a source of a charged beam, and the like have been studied.
  • image display units where a surface conduction electron-emitting device and phosphor which emits light by irradiation of an electron beam are combined and used have been studied.
  • the image display units where a surface conduction electron-emitting device and phosphor are combined and used are expected in characteristics superior to those of conventional image display units where other methods are used. For example, even if it is compared with an LCD which has spread in recent years, it can be said that it is excellent in terms of not requiring a backlight since it is a spontaneous light type unit, and in terms of a wide viewing angle.
  • the present inventor et al. has tried, for example, a multi-electron beam source by an electric wiring method shown in FIG. 31.
  • a multi-electron beam source where plenty of electron emission devices are arranged two-dimensionally, and are wired in a matrix as shown in the figure.
  • reference numeral 1 schematically denotes an electron emission device
  • numeral 2 does row-directional wiring
  • numeral 3 does column-directional wiring.
  • the row-directional wiring 2 and the column-directional wiring 3 have wiring resistance 4 and 5 , wiring inductance 6 and 7 , and wiring capacitance 8 .
  • the device is shown in a 4 ⁇ 4 matrix for the convenience of illustration, of course, the scale of the matrix is not necessarily restricted to this, but in the case of, for example, a multi-electron beam source for an image display unit, a sufficient number of devices for performing desired image display are arranged and wired.
  • a pulse width modulation waveform is shown in FIG. 32.
  • selection potential Vs is applied to the wiring in the direction of a row selected, and non-selective potential Vns is simultaneously applied to the row-directional wirings not selected.
  • Drive potential Ve for outputting an electron beam is applied to column-directional wirings in synchronizing with this.
  • a voltage of Ve-Vs is applied to the electron emission devices in the row selected, and a voltage of Ve-Vns is applied to the electron emission devices in the non-selective rows.
  • An electron beam with desired intensity is outputted only from an electron emission device in a selected row if Ve, Vs, and Vns are made to be proper potential.
  • Ve, Vs, and Vns are made to be proper potential.
  • the response speed of a cold cathode device is high, if the length of time for applying drive potential Ve is changed, it is possible to change the length of time when the electron beam is outputted.
  • control an electron beam also by a method which is called level modulation and which controls luminance brightness by changing potentials and current values which are applied to the column-directional wirings.
  • time for driving one scanning line is 1/(60 ⁇ 1080) ⁇ 15 ⁇ sec.
  • minimum pulse width is 1/(60 ⁇ 1080 ⁇ 210) ⁇ 15 ns, and hence, the minimum pulse width resolution of 15 ns is needed.
  • wiring shown in FIG. 31 is equivalent to a low-pass filter with a cut-off frequency determined by wiring inductance (L), wiring capacitance (c), and wiring resistance (R).
  • PWM line sequential-pulse width modulation
  • a synthetic waveform with an output waveform of a scan circuit 11 which is applied to the electron emission device 1 becomes a waveform whose level becomes low when the pulse width modulation driving waveform at low gradation is applied from an information electrode drive circuit 10 . That is, since a level of a driving waveform which consists of only high frequency spectrum components, that is, a pulse width modulation driving waveform at low gradation becomes low, it is not possible to display an image at desired gradation in a low gradation region.
  • FIG. 33 is a time chart for explaining this, and as shown in the figure, even if a control constant current source supplies a short current pulse, a current If hardly flows into an electron emission device. In addition, even when a long pulse is supplied, the drive current If which flows into an electron emission device becomes a waveform with large leading time. Although a cold cathode type electron emission device itself has high-speed responding capability, a current waveform supplied to the electron emission device becomes dull, and hence, a waveform of an emission current Ie is also deformed as a result.
  • a driving waveform which has a period longer than a period of a time slot of a conventional PWM waveform is realized by dividing each word of a digital image signal into a plurality of sub words and assigning a PWM waveform, whose level is low, to a lower sub word, and a PWM waveform, whose level is high, to a higher sub word, and the deterioration of image display quality in low luminance brightness is prevented.
  • FIG. 34 shows an example of a substrate of a multi-electron beam source.
  • reference numeral 1 denotes an electron emission device
  • numeral 2 does a selection electrode (row-directional wiring)
  • numeral 3 does an information electrode (column-directional wiring)
  • numeral 9 does a selection circuit
  • numeral 10 does a modulation circuit
  • numeral 12 does the substrate.
  • FIG. 35 is a perspective view of an image display panel where the substrate 11 of a multi-electron beam source shown in FIG. 34 is used.
  • reference numeral 13 denotes a metal back
  • numeral 14 does a fluorescent screen
  • numeral 15 does a faceplate
  • numeral 16 does a current from an electron source.
  • reference numeral 16 denotes a current component which flows from an information electrode to the selection electrode through an electron emission device, and numeral 4 does a resistive component of the selection electrode.
  • a current flowing into the selection electrode to each device is made into the same value If, and it is assumed that the resistance of a selection electrode per pixel is rf. Potential on the selection electrode at this time is calculated.
  • a current which flows into Rf 5 is If, and an amount of a voltage drop by Rf 5 is If ⁇ rf.
  • a current which flows into Rf 4 is 2 ⁇ If, and an amount of a voltage drop by Rf 4 is 2 ⁇ IF ⁇ rf.
  • an amount of a voltage drop in each resistive component is calculated, and the result of calculating the potential of each portion on the selection electrode is shown in FIG. 37.
  • the case of Ve>Vs is shown.
  • FIG. 38A, 38B and 38 C show driving waveforms applied to a pixel in the most distant edge at this time.
  • FIG. 38A shows a potential waveform applied to a selection electrode
  • FIG. 38B shows a potential waveform applied to an information electrode
  • FIG. 38C shows a voltage waveform applied to the selected electron emission device. It can be seen that a voltage applied to the device falls because selection potential becomes Vs′ from Vs.
  • this voltage dispersion does not pose a problem so much when a resistive component of a selection electrode is very small, for example, if the resistive component of a selection electrode is large due to an increase of screen size of an image display unit etc., the dispersion of the voltage cannot be disregarded. In addition, when a pixel count increases and the current which flows into a selection electrode increases, the voltage dispersion becomes large.
  • An aspect of the drive circuit of a light-emitting device is configured as follows. To emit the light-emitting device with the brightness corresponding to brightness data, the drive circuit drives the light-emitting device by the driving waveform whose pulse width is controlled in a unit of slot width ⁇ t and whose level in each slot is controlled at least in n stages of A 1 to A n (where n is an integer equal to or larger than 2, and 0 ⁇ A 1 ⁇ A 2 ⁇ . . . ⁇ A n ).
  • all driving waveforms having a rising portion up to a predetermined level A k (where k is an integer equal to or larger than 2 and equal to and smaller than n) rise up to the predetermined level A k through each level in order at least by one slot from a level A 1 to a level A k ⁇ 1 .
  • the light-emitting device can be correctly driven by stepwise raising the driving waveform.
  • the rising portion of the driving waveform has a level higher than the level Ak, it is not desired to raise the driving waveform suddenly after the level A k has been reached. Therefore, in the above mentioned aspect of the present invention, it is desired that the level A k is the maximum level of the driving waveform (at least in the rising portion).
  • Another aspect of the drive circuit of a light-emitting device can be configured as follows.
  • the drive circuit drives the light-emitting device by the driving waveform whose pulse width is controlled in a unit of slot width ⁇ t and whose level in each slot is controlled at least in n stages of A 1 to A n (where n is an integer equal to or larger than 2, and 0 ⁇ A 1 ⁇ A 2 ⁇ . . . ⁇ A n ).
  • all driving waveforms having a falling portion from a predetermined level A k (where k is an integer equal to or larger than 2 and equal to and smaller than n) falls from the predetermined level A k through each level from a level
  • a further aspect of the drive circuit of a light-emitting device can be configured as follows.
  • the drive circuit drives the light-emitting device by the driving waveform whose pulse width is controlled in a unit of slot width ⁇ t and whose level in each slot is controlled at least in n stages of A 1 to A n (where n is an integer equal to or larger than 2, and 0 ⁇ A 1 ⁇ A 2 ⁇ . . . ⁇ A n ).
  • the driving waveform has: a rising portion up to a predetermined level A k (where k indicates an integer equal to or larger than 2 and equal to or smaller than n) through each level from a level A 1 to a level A k ⁇ 1 in order at least by one slot; and a falling portion from the level A k through each level from the level A k ⁇ 1 to the level A 1 in order at least by one slot (hereinafter referred to as a third driving method).
  • a light-emitting device can be correctly driven using the drive circuit according to this aspect of the present invention.
  • the level immediately before rising up to the level A 1 in the rising portion of the driving waveform can be a value at which the light-emitting device cannot be practically driven.
  • the level immediately after falling from the level A 1 in the falling portion of the driving waveform can be a value at which the light-emitting device cannot be practically driven.
  • the level at which the light-emitting device cannot be practically driven refers to a value at which the light-emitting device does not emit light corresponding to the lowest level of gray scale of brightness data when one slot of the level is input. Practically, the level which does not exceed a drive threshold of the light-emitting device is selected.
  • the light-emitting device is assigned a basic potential (for example, the selected potential for use in the matrix drive described later).
  • a basic potential for example, the selected potential for use in the matrix drive described later.
  • the potential difference between the potential corresponding to each portion of the driving waveform (the potential when a level is controlled based on the potential control, or the potential for passing a current when the level is controlled based on the current control) and the basic potential is assigned to the light-emitting device.
  • the level indicates the drive threshold of the light-emitting device.
  • a desired configuration can be obtained by setting the level at which the light-emitting device is not practically driven before the driving waveform rises up to A 1 equal to the level at which the light-emitting device is not practically driven after the driving waveform falls from A 1 .
  • a higher level refers to a value which provides more driving energy for a light-emitting device, but does not always relate to the level of the potential. For example, when predetermined potential is assigned as basic potential and the potential of a driving waveform is lower than the predetermined potential, the level whichever has lower potential is higher.
  • a driving waveform can be preferably set by setting as follows the relationship between a first driving waveform and a second driving waveform obtained by increasing/decreasing the driving energy of the first driving waveform driving a light-emitting device.
  • the levels of the first to a (k ⁇ 1)th slot are respectively A 1 to A k ⁇ 1
  • the level of a k-th slot and a (N k +k ⁇ 1)th slot is A k
  • the levels of an (N k +k)th to an (N k +2(k ⁇ 1))th slots are level A k ⁇ 1 to level A 1 , based on which another driving waveform is obtained by one level increasing driving energy for driving the light-emitting device into the level A 1 for the (N k +2k ⁇ 1)th slot, thereafter one level increasing the driving energy by increasing the level from A 1 to A 2 in the N k +2(k ⁇ 1)th slot, and increasing the driving energy by increasing the level from A k ⁇ 1 to A k in the (N k +k)th slot.
  • the driving waveform obtained by one level increasing the driving energy of the driving waveform for driving the light-emitting device having a falling portion to a level at which the light-emitting device cannot be practically driven through each level from a level A k to a value smaller than the level A k in order by one slot has a waveform obtained by increasing to Al the level of the slot subsequent to the slot having the level A 1 in the falling portion of the driving waveform in the preceding stage, thereafter one level increasing the energy for driving the light-emitting device with one level increasing the level of the slot before the one in which the level is one level increased in the driving waveform in the two stages before.
  • the aspect of the present invention defines the waveform of a drive signal.
  • the aspect of the present invention relates to the second driving waveform obtained by one level increasing the drive energy of the first driving waveform corresponding to a certain level of energy, it does not limit a timing of applying the first and second driving waveforms in a predetermined period.
  • the second driving waveform is included in an embodiment of setting up the second driving waveform from the first slot in the predetermined period.
  • the embodiment of the present invention is not limited to the configuration in which the timing of the rise of the first driving waveform is the same as the timing of the rise of the second driving waveform in a predetermined period (for example, a selection period in the matrix drive as described later).
  • the driving waveform obtained by one level increasing the driving energy of the driving waveform for driving the light-emitting device having a falling portion to a level at which the light-emitting device cannot be practically driven through each level from a level A k to a value smaller than the level A k in order by one slot has a waveform obtained by increasing to A 1 the level of the slot subsequent to the slot having the level A 1 in the falling portion of the driving waveform in the preceding stage, thereafter one level increasing the energy for driving the light-emitting device with one level increasing the level of the slot before the one in which the level is one level increased in the driving waveform in the two stages before.
  • a change of a level in the consecutive slots in the falling portions of the respective driving waveforms can be within one level.
  • the relationship in which the driving waveform obtained by one level increasing the energy for driving the light-emitting device of the preceding driving waveform has the waveform obtained by one level increasing the level of the slot before the one in which the level is one level increased over the driving waveform of the two stages before can preferably apply the configuration in which the driving waveform depending on the relationship is satisfied by a series of driving waveforms up to the driving waveform whose level of the slot in which the level is increased from the driving waveform in the preceding stage and has a level one level higher than the level A k .
  • the driving waveform to be obtained by one level increasing the last driving waveform of the series of driving waveforms can be obtained as a waveform obtained by changing into A 1 the level of the slot subsequent to the slot having the level A 1 in the falling portion of the last driving waveform.
  • the following process can be applied when the level A k is the maximum permissible level, or when the update of the level is to be avoided if possible. That is, the relationship in which the driving waveform obtained by one level increasing the energy for driving the light-emitting device of the preceding driving waveform has the waveform obtained by one level increasing the level of the slot before the one in which the level is one level increased over the driving waveform of the two stages before can preferably apply the configuration in which the driving waveform depending on the relationship is satisfied by a series of driving waveforms up to the driving waveform whose level of the slot in which the level is increased from the driving waveform in the preceding stage and has a level one level higher than the level A k .
  • the driving waveform to be obtained by one level increasing the last driving waveform of the series of driving waveforms can be obtained as a waveform obtained by changing into A 1 the level of the slot subsequent to the slot having the level A 1 in the falling portion of the last driving waveform.
  • a series of driving waveforms having different driving energy in each stage can be set as follows. That is, when the slot in which the driving waveform rises up to the level A 1 is defined as a first slot, the levels of the first to a (k ⁇ 1)th slot are respectively A 1 to A k ⁇ 1 , the level of a k-th slot and a (N k +k ⁇ 1)th slot is A k , and the levels of an (N k +k)th to an (N k +2(k ⁇ 1))th slots are level A k ⁇ 1 to level A 1 , based on which another driving waveform is obtained by one level decreasing driving energy for driving the light-emitting device from A k to A k ⁇ 1 for the k-th slot, thereafter one level decreasing the driving energy by increasing the level from A k ⁇ 1 to A k ⁇ 2 in the (k ⁇ 1)th slot, and increasing the driving energy by increasing the level from A 1 to the level at which the light-emitting device cannot be practically driven in
  • the aspect of the present invention defines the waveform of a drive signal.
  • the aspect of the present invention relates to the second driving waveform obtained by one level increasing the drive energy of the first driving waveform corresponding to a certain level of energy, it does not limit a timing of applying the first and second driving waveforms in a predetermined period.
  • the second driving waveform is included in an embodiment of setting up the second driving waveform from the first slot in the predetermined period.
  • the embodiment of the present invention is not limited to the configuration in which the timing of the rise of the first driving waveform is the same as the timing of the fall of the second driving waveform in a predetermined period (for example, a selection period in the matrix drive as described later).
  • a driving waveform having a rising portion up to a level A k in order at least by one slot from each level lower than the level A k can be obtained by a driving waveform having one level decreased energy for driving the light-emitting device as having a waveform indicating the level A k ⁇ 1 of the slot which is subsequent to the slot having the level A k ⁇ 1 in the rising portion in the preceding driving waveform and whose level is A k , and the driving waveform having one level decreased energy for driving the light-emitting device has a one level decreased waveform from the level of the slot before the one from which the level of the driving waveform is one level decreased.
  • the level in the slot between two slots having the level A k is also A k . Since the levels can be maintained in the portion other than the rising and falling portions, the light-emitting device can be more correctly driven and a driving waveform can be easily generated.
  • the driving waveform obtained by increasing the driving energy for driving the light-emitting device more than a predetermined driving waveform increases the pulse width rather than raise the maximum level.
  • a preferred configuration for prioritizing the increase of the pulse width over the raise of the level is configured such that the maximum level cannot be exceeded when the driving energy is increased by increasing the pulse width of any level with the raising or falling through each level at least by one slot maintained.
  • the driving waveform obtained when the maximum level of the driving waveform is set high by one level increasing the driving energy for driving the light-emitting device is configured such that the maximum level can continue as much as possible by increasing by one the number of unit driving waveform blocks defined by the level difference A n ⁇ A n ⁇ 1 , . . . , or A n ⁇ A 1 or the level difference between the level A 1 and the level which is the driving threshold of the light-emitting device, and the slot width ⁇ t.
  • the driving waveform obtained by one level further increasing the driving energy by adding the unit driving waveform blocks is the driving waveform having the level of an arbitrary slot in the (k+1)th to the (S ⁇ k)th slots changed from A k to A k+1 .
  • the slot in which the level is changed from A k to A k+1 is, for example, either the (k+1)th slot or the (S ⁇ k)th slot.
  • the driving waveform whose maximum level is increased by one level increasing the driving energy for driving the light-emitting device on a predetermined driving waveform is obtained by rearranging the unit driving waveform blocks such that the maximum level can continue for at least two slots by increasing the number of the unit driving waveform blocks by one over the number used for the predetermined driving waveform.
  • the present invention also includes the configuration in which the maximum level does not continue for two or more slots. That is, the driving waveform obtained by increasing the maximum level by one level increasing the driving energy for driving the light-emitting device on a predetermined driving waveform is obtained by rearranging the unit driving waveform blocks such that the maximum level can continue for two or more slots by increasing by one the number of the unit driving waveform blocks over the number used in the predetermined driving waveform.
  • the driving waveform having a level A 1 and the slot width ⁇ t is configured to have the driving energy for emitting light with the brightness corresponding to substantially 1 LSB of the brightness data.
  • the levels A 1 to A n can preferably form the configurations of different potential.
  • the levels A 1 to A n can form the configuration corresponding to the potential with which the brightness of the light-emitting device is substantially 1:2: . . . :n.
  • the levels A 1 to A n can form the configuration corresponding to the potential with which the level difference A m ⁇ A m ⁇ 1 (where m indicates an integer equal to or larger than 1 and equal to or smaller than n, and the level A 1 is a driving threshold of a light-emitting device) is substantially constant.
  • the levels A 1 to A n can also be different current values.
  • the levels A 1 to A n can have the brightness of the light-emitting device of substantially 1:2: . . . : in potential, and the levels A 1 to A n can indicate the level difference A m ⁇ A m ⁇ 1 (where m is an integer equal to or larger than 1 and equal to or smaller than n) substantially constant in potential.
  • the levels A 1 to A n can be configured as having the current value having the level of substantially 1:2: . . . . :n.
  • the present invention also includes the following aspects. That is,
  • a drive circuit for generating a driving waveform corresponding to brightness gray-scale data whose level is controlled by a plurality of discontinuous levels including the minimum level corresponding to the non-zero brightness gray-scale data and one or more non-minimum levels corresponding to larger brightness gray-scale data; which generates a driving waveform signal whose pulse width is controlled by discontinuous pulse widths; and whose driving waveform has a portion controlled by the non-minimum level at the head and the end of the driving waveform.
  • the level corresponding to non-zero brightness gray-scale data refers to a level at which a level at which light can be emitted corresponding to the brightness gray-scale data other than zero by applying the driving waveform controlled for the level to a light-emitting device.
  • the present invention also includes the following aspects. That is,
  • a drive circuit for generating a driving waveform corresponding to brightness gray-scale data whose level is controlled by a plurality of discontinuous levels including the minimum level corresponding to the non-zero brightness gray-scale data and one or more non-minimum levels corresponding to larger brightness gray-scale data; which generates a driving waveform signal whose pulse width is controlled by discontinuous pulse widths; and whose entire driving waveforms have a portion controlled by the non-minimum level at least at one of the head and the end of the driving waveform.
  • the present invention also includes the following aspects. That is,
  • a drive circuit for generating a driving waveform corresponding to brightness gray-scale data whose level is controlled by a plurality of discontinuous levels including the minimum level corresponding to the non-zero brightness gray-scale data, non-minimum levels corresponding to larger brightness gray-scale data, and an intermediate level between the minimum level and the non-minimum level; which generates a driving waveform signal whose pulse width is controlled by discontinuous pulse widths; as whose driving waveforms having a portion controlled by the non-minimum level, a portion controlled by the minimum level is included at the head at a predetermined time width, a portion controlled by the intermediate level is included immediately after, and a portion controlled by the non-minimum level larger than the intermediate level is included immediately after the portion at a time width larger than the predetermined time width; and which generates a driving waveform having a portion controlled by the non-minimum level larger than the intermediate level at a width larger than the predetermined time width.
  • the present invention also includes the following aspects. That is,
  • a drive circuit for generating a driving waveform corresponding to brightness gray-scale data whose level is controlled by a plurality of discontinuous levels including the minimum level corresponding to the non-zero brightness gray-scale data, non-minimum levels corresponding to larger brightness gray-scale data, and an intermediate level between the minimum level and the non-minimum level; which generates a driving waveform signal whose pulse width is controlled by discontinuous pulse widths; as whose driving waveforms having a portion controlled by the non-minimum level, a portion controlled by the minimum level is included at the end, a portion controlled by the intermediate level is included immediately before, and a portion controlled by the non-minimum level larger than the intermediate level is included before the portion controlled by the intermediate level at a time width larger than the predetermined time width; and which generates a driving waveform having a portion controlled by the non-minimum level larger than the intermediate level at a width larger than the predetermined time width.
  • the present invention also includes the following aspects. That is,
  • a series of predetermined driving waveforms obtained by one level increasing the driving energy of the driving waveform for driving the light-emitting device having a falling portion through each level from a level A k to a value smaller than the level A k in order at least by one slot having a waveform obtained by increasing to A 1 the level of the slot subsequent to the slot having the level A 1 in the falling portion of the driving waveform in the preceding stage, thereafter one level increasing the energy for driving the light-emitting device with one level increasing the level of the slot before the one in which the level is one level increased in the driving waveform in the two stages before, from which a desired driving waveform is selected to drive the light-emitting device.
  • the series of driving waveforms can be, for example, from the predetermined driving waveform to the driving waveform subsequent to the predetermined driving waveform, and the driving waveform obtained by increasing to A 1 the level of the slot subsequent to the slot whose level is A 1 in the falling portion of the predetermined driving waveform, and the subsequent driving waveforms obtained by one level increasing the driving energy for driving the light-emitting device on the driving waveform in the preceding stage one level increasing the level of one slot before the slot obtained by one level increasing the level on the two stages before in the driving waveform in the previous driving waveform, thereby obtaining one or more driving waveforms and the driving waveform in the previous stage in the relation for which the level is increased in the slot whose level is the level A k .
  • the series of driving waveforms can be the subsequent driving waveforms having the level A k in the slot in which the level is increased for the driving waveform in the preceding stage, a series of driving waveforms having a level one level higher than the level A k of the slot before the slot having the level A k in the preceding stage in the above mentioned relation, or the waveform obtained by increasing the level to A 1 of the slot subsequent to the slot whose level is A 1 in the falling portion of the driving waveform in the slot in which the level of the driving waveform in the preceding stage is increased.
  • the aspect of the present invention includes the following aspect. That is, in a method of driving the light-emitting device by a driving waveform whose pulse width is controlled in a slot width ⁇ t and whose level is controlled in n stages of at least A 1 to A n (where n is an integer equal to or larger than 2, and 0 ⁇ A 1 ⁇ A 2 ⁇ . . . ⁇ A n ) in each slot to emit a light-emitting device with the brightness corresponding to brightness data,
  • the driving waveform obtained by one level decreasing the energy for driving the light-emitting device from a predetermined driving waveform having a rising portion up to the level A k through each level lower than the level A k in order at least by one slot has a waveform by changing the level A k of the slot subsequent to the slot having the level A k ⁇ 1 in the rising portion of the driving waveform in the preceding stage into the level A k ⁇ 1 , and the driving waveform obtained by one level decreasing the energy for driving the light-emitting device is obtained by selecting a desired driving waveform from a series of driving waveforms obtained by one level decreasing the level of one slot before the slot obtained by one level decreasing the level from the driving waveform in the two stages before and driving the light-emitting device.
  • the aspect of the present invention includes the following aspect. That is,
  • a plurality of driving waveform corresponding to plural pieces of brightness data have rising portions up to a predetermined level A k (where k indicates an integer equal to or larger than 3 and equal to or smaller than n), and includes a driving waveform having a rising portion up to the predetermined level A k through each level from a level A 1 to a level A k ⁇ 1 in order at least by one slot.
  • the aspect of the present invention includes the following aspect. That is,
  • a plurality of driving waveform corresponding to plural pieces of brightness data have falling portions to a predetermined level A k (where k indicates an integer equal to or larger than 3 and equal to or smaller than n), and includes a driving waveform having a falling portion from the predetermined level A k through each level from a level A k ⁇ 1 to a level A 1 in order at least by one slot.
  • the light-emitting devices are a plurality of light-emitting device forming a matrix display, and apply to each light-emitting device the driving waveform corresponding to respective brightness data.
  • the present invention also includes the following configuration as an aspect of the display device according to the present invention.
  • a display device having a multilight-emitting device by matrix-wiring a plurality of light-emitting devices using scanning signal wiring and information signal wiring, a scanning circuit connected to the scanning signal wiring, and a modulation circuit connected to the information signal wiring,
  • the modulation circuit drives a light-emitting device selected by the scanning circuit in each of the above mentioned driving methods.
  • the scanning circuit sequentially selects each scanning signal wiring, assigns selected potential as basic potential to the selected scanning signal wiring, and assigns to a plurality of light-emitting devices connected to the selected scanning signal wiring a signal having the above mentioned driving waveforms through a plurality of information signal wiring to which the elements are connected.
  • the time from starting the rise of the driving waveform to the reaching the maximum level A k can be set such that the time can be substantially equal to or larger than a time constant of 0% to 90% depending on the load of the information signal wiring of the multilight-emitting device and the driving capability of the drive circuit.
  • the time constant of 0% to 90% is used in measuring a driving waveform at a portion where the driving waveform is supplied to the wiring, and refers to the time required to reach the potential 0.9 times as high as the potential difference from the time when the potential starts changing in the portion when the driving waveform rises up to the desired potential.
  • the driving waveform to be applied to a part of the above mentioned plurality of information signal wirings is controlled such that the rise can start in the first half of the selection period, and the driving waveform to be applied to another part of the information signal wiring is controlled such that the fall can start in the second half of the selection period.
  • a plurality of slots are set to control the pulse width.
  • the driving waveform to be applied to a part of the above mentioned plurality of information signal wirings is applied such that the driving waveform can rise from the first (or close to first) slot for the pulse width control in the selection period independent of the corresponding driving energy (gray-scale), and the driving waveform to be applied to the remaining information signal wiring is applied such that the driving waveform can rise in the last (or close to the last) slot for the pulse width control in the selection period independent of the corresponding driving energy, thereby distributing the current concurrently flowing in a plurality of information signal wirings.
  • the information signal wiring in which the rise timing of the driving waveform to be applied set in the first half in the selection period and the information signal wiring in which the fall timing of the driving waveform to be applied set in the second half in the selection period can be alternately arranged.
  • the time axis of the driving waveform can be configured opposite between a part of the plurality of information signal wiring and the remaining portions.
  • the present invention also includes the following aspect. That is,
  • a display device having a multilight-emitting device by matrix-wiring a plurality of light-emitting devices using scanning signal wiring and information signal wiring, a scanning circuit connected to the scanning signal wiring, and a modulation circuit connected to the information signal wiring,
  • the modulation circuit includes a circuit for controlling a pulse width of a unit pulse of a slot width ⁇ t in a range of 0 to 22 to display R-bit brightness data to be input as image data, and a circuit for controlling a level within a range of the first to the 2 Q -th level of a level level, and the data of the R, P, and Q has the relation of R ⁇ P+Q.
  • a light-emitting device can be an LED, an EL, and an electron emission device.
  • the electron emission device does not emit light itself, but can be used as a light-emitting device using an object fluorescent through emitted electrons.
  • the electron emission device can be a cold cathode device.
  • a field emission (FE) type electron emission device, and an MIM type electron emission device can be preferably used.
  • FE field emission
  • MIM MIM type electron emission device
  • a surface conduction type emission device SCE
  • the surface conduction type emission device can generate a number of devices with uniform electron emission characteristic, and is a desired device.
  • a combination use of pulse width control and pulse level control enables the resolution of a level of pulse level control, that is, the minimum level difference, to be set as an easily realized value. Furthermore, the resolution of the pulse width control, that is, the slot width can be larger to lower the maximum frequency of a drive signal and the maximum level. Especially, by raising or dropping the driving waveform in a stepped form, the levels of the rising or falling portions can be protected against a sudden change. Thus, for example, an unnecessary radiation can be suppressed. Furthermore, an irregular driving waveform can be reduced to prevent the deterioration of the grayscale characteristic at a low gray scale level. In addition, the occurrence of overshoot or ringing can be suppressed, and the application of an abnormal voltage to a light-emitting device can be prevented.
  • FIG. 1 is a block diagram of a multi-electron source drive circuit according to an embodiment of the present invention
  • FIG. 2 is a block diagram of a modulation circuit in FIG. 1;
  • FIG. 3 is a block diagram of a PWM circuit in FIG. 2;
  • FIG. 4 is a block diagram showing an example of the principal part structure of the PWM circuit of FIG. 3;
  • FIG. 5 is a block diagram showing another example of the principal part structure of the PWM circuit of FIG. 3;
  • FIG. 6 is a circuit diagram showing an example of an output stage circuit in FIG. 2;
  • FIG. 7 is a graph showing the voltage/luminescence intensity characteristics of a light-emitting device (current equal dividing);
  • FIG. 8 is a waveform chart showing an example of V14 driving waveforms by the current equal dividing
  • FIG. 9 is a structural diagram of an rXs matrix type image display unit
  • FIG. 10 is a waveform chart of a driving waveform in a pulse width modulation circuit by conventional technology in the case that luminance brightness data is between zero and 1 ⁇ 4 of the maximum luminance brightness;
  • FIG. 11 is a waveform chart of driving waveforms in a pulse width modulation circuit by a first embodiment in the case that luminance brightness data is between zero and 1 ⁇ 4 of the maximum luminance brightness;
  • FIG. 12 is an equivalent circuit diagram of the multi-light emitting device in FIG. 1;
  • FIG. 13 is a diagram of a single bit column-directional wiring model of the equivalent circuit diagram in FIG. 12;
  • FIG. 14 is a voltage waveform chart at an end of row-directional wiring in the model in FIG. 13;
  • FIG. 15 is a current waveform chart flowing into column-directional wiring in the model in FIG. 13;
  • FIG. 16 is a voltage waveform chart at an end of row-directional wiring in the case of driving with a conventional waveform
  • FIG. 17 is a current waveform chart flowing into column-directional wiring in the case of driving with a conventional waveform
  • FIG. 18 is a waveform chart showing an example of V14 driving waveforms by voltage equal dividing
  • FIG. 19 is a graph showing the voltage/luminescence intensity characteristics of a light emitting device (voltage equal dividing);
  • FIG. 20 is a graph showing linearity in V14 driving in FIGS. 8 and 18;
  • FIG. 21 is a waveform chart showing an example of Vn driving waveforms
  • FIG. 22 is a waveform chart showing modulation waveforms and a current, which flows in arbitrary scan wiring Yq, in V14 driving (front alignment);
  • FIG. 23 is a waveform chart showing modulation waveforms and a current, which flows in arbitrary scan wiring Yq, in Vn driving (front alignment);
  • FIG. 24 is a waveform chart showing modulation waveforms and a current, which flows in arbitrary scan wiring Yq, in the case of using front and back alignment in Vn driving;
  • FIG. 25 is a waveform chart showing an example of new Vn driving waveforms
  • FIG. 26 is a waveform chart showing an example of modulation waveforms and a current, which flows in arbitrary scan wiring Yq, in new Vn driving (front alignment);
  • FIG. 27 is a waveform chart showing modulation waveforms and a current, which flows in arbitrary scan wiring Yq, in the case of using front and back alignment in new Vn driving;
  • FIG. 28 is a schematic diagram showing an example of the device structure of a surface conductive emission device
  • FIG. 29 is a sectional view showing an example of the device structure of an FE type device
  • FIG. 30 is a sectional view showing an example of the device structure of an MIM type device
  • FIG. 31 is a wiring diagram showing the electric structure of a multi-electron beam source
  • FIG. 32 is an output waveform chart of a conventional scan circuit and a conventional pulse width modulation circuit
  • FIG. 33 is an output waveform chart of a conventional scan circuit and a conventional pulse width modulation circuit
  • FIG. 34 is a structural diagram of a multi-electron beam source
  • FIG. 35 is an exploded perspective view of the multi-electron source in FIG. 34;
  • FIG. 36 is an equivalent circuit diagram at the time when all the pixels connected to a certain selection electrode light up;
  • FIG. 37 is a graph showing the voltage of each portion on a selection electrode in the circuit shown in FIG. 36;
  • FIGS. 38A, 38B and 38 C are charts of driving waveforms applied to a pixel in the most distant edge in the circuit shown in FIG. 36;
  • FIG. 39 is a waveform chart of signals TV 4 to TVl and GV 4 to GV 0 in FIG. 6.
  • N k is an integer which is one or more
  • N k is an integer which is one or more
  • a driving waveform having drive energy with one more step is obtained by changing the level of a (N k +2k ⁇ 1)-th slot from the value, at which a device is not driven substantially, to A 1 , and it is possible to form the driving waveform obtained by increasing the above-described drive energy at a time by one step by changing the level of a (N k +2(k ⁇ 1))-th slot from A 1 to A 2 hereafter, and changing the level of a (N k +k)-th slot from A k ⁇ 1 to A k . In addition, it is also good to reverse the order of this waveform setting method.
  • the driving waveform having the drive energy, increased by one more step, for the driving waveform where the number of the slots whose levels are A k becomes three from two by increasing one more step of drive energy for the previous driving waveform is made into the geometry of changing the level of a center slot among three slots, having levels of the above-described driving waveform which are A k, from A k to A k+1 .
  • the driving waveform having drive energy, increased by one more step, for the driving waveform where the number of slots whose levels are A k becomes four from three by increasing one more step of drive energy for the previous driving waveform, be in the geometry of changing the levels of slots except both ends out of the four slots, whose levels of the above-described driving waveform are A k , to A k+1 from A k .
  • V14 driving the drive method using such a driving waveform train is called “V14 driving”.
  • the driving waveform is changed into a driving waveform in which pulse width is the number of slots that is equal to or more than (S ⁇ k+2k+1)/(k+1) and closest to this, whose maximum level is Ak+1, and which shows step-like leading and trailing edges where the number of the above-described unit driving waveform blocks is larger by one than that of the driving waveform instead of changing the level of the above-described (N k +2k ⁇ 1)-th slot to A 1 from the level at which a device is not driven substantially.
  • Vn driving the drive method using such a driving waveform train.
  • a unit driving waveform block which is determined by level difference A n ⁇ A n ⁇ 1 , . . .
  • slot width ⁇ t has the drive energy which makes the above-described light emitting device emit light in luminance brightness corresponding to 1 LSB of luminance brightness data (luminance brightness corresponding to the minimum gradation) respectively.
  • the drive method using such a driving waveform train is called
  • FIG. 1 is a block diagram of a multi-electron source drive circuit according to an example of the present invention.
  • This figure shows a multi-electron source 101 , a modulation circuit 102 , a scan circuit 103 , a timing generation circuit 104 , a data conversion circuit 105 , and a multi-power source circuit 106 .
  • a multi-electron source 101 is driven in this structure.
  • the multi-electron source 101 comprises an electron source (electron emission device) 1 provided in an intersection of row-directional wiring 2 and column-directional wiring 3 .
  • As an electron source although the SCE type, FE type, and MIM type electron emission device are known as described above, in this Example, the SCE type electron emission device was used.
  • the data conversion circuit 105 converts drive data, used for driving the multi-electron source 101 from the external, into a format suitable for the modulation circuit 102 .
  • the modulation circuit 102 is connected to the column-directional wiring of the multi-electron source 101 , and inputs a modulated signal into the multi-electron source 101 according to the drive data, which is given data conversion, from the data conversion circuit 105 .
  • the scan circuit 103 is connected to the row-directional wiring of the multi-electron source 101 , and selects a row of the multi-electron source 101 to which an output of the modulation circuit 102 is applied.
  • the timing generation circuit 104 generates timing signals for the modulation circuit 102 , scan circuit 103 , and data conversion circuit 104 .
  • the multi-power source circuit 106 outputs a plurality of supply values, and controls an output value of the modulation circuit 102 .
  • the multi-power source circuit 106 is not limited to this.
  • FIG. 2 is a block diagram showing the internal structure of the modulation circuit 102 .
  • the modulation circuit 102 comprises a shift register 107 , a PWM circuit 108 , and an output stage circuit 109 .
  • the modulation data which is given format conversion of drive data by the data conversion circuit 105 is inputted into the shift register 107 , and modulation data according to the column-directional wiring of the multi-electron source 101 is transmitted by the shift register 107 .
  • the output stage circuit 109 is connected to the multi-power source circuit 106 , and outputs a driving waveform according to the present invention.
  • the PWM circuit 108 inputs modulation data according to the column-directional wiring of the multi-electron source 101 from the shift register 107 , and generates a pulse width output according to each output voltage of the output stage circuit 106 .
  • the timing signal for the control of the shift register 107 and PWM circuit 108 is inputted from the timing generation circuit 104 .
  • FIG. 3 is a block diagram showing the internal structure of the PWM circuit 108 .
  • the PWM circuit 108 is not limited to this.
  • the PWM circuit 108 comprises a latch 110 , a V1 start circuit 111 , a V2 start circuit 112 , a V3 start circuit 113 , a V4 start circuit 114 , a V1 end circuit 115 , a V2 end circuit 116 , a V3 end circuit 117 , a V4 end circuit 118 , a V1 PWM generation circuit 119 , a V2 PWM generation circuit 120 , a V3 PWM generation circuit 121 , and a V4 PWM generation circuit 122 .
  • the latch circuit 110 latches each modulation data outputted from each shift register 107 according to a load signal outputted from the timing generation circuit 104 .
  • the load signal outputted from the timing generation circuit 104 is also used as a start timing signal of each PWM signal.
  • the modulation data latched by the latch circuit 110 is further inputted into the V1 to V4 start circuits 111 to 114 , and the V1 to V4 end circuits 115 to 118 .
  • a start signal outputted from V1 start circuit 111 and an end signal outputted from the V1 end circuit 115 are inputted into the V1 PWM circuit 119 , and a PWM output corresponding to an output voltage V1 is inputted into the output stage circuit 109 .
  • a start signal outputted from V2 start circuit 112 and an end signal outputted from the V2 end circuit 116 are inputted into the V2 PWM circuit 120
  • a PWM output corresponding to an output voltage V2 is inputted into the output stage circuit 109
  • a start signal outputted from the V3 start circuit 113 and an end signal outputted from the V3 end circuit 117 are inputted into the V3 PWM circuit 121
  • a PWM output corresponding to an output voltage V3 is inputted into the output stage circuit 109
  • a start signal outputted from the V4 start circuit 114 and an end signal outputted from the V4 end circuit 118 are inputted into the V4 PWM circuit 122
  • a PWM output corresponding to an output voltage V4 is inputted into the output stage circuit 109 .
  • the start signal outputted from the V2 start circuit 112 is outputted in the timing later than the start signal outputted from the V1 start circuit 111
  • the start signal outputted from the V3 start circuit 113 is outputted in the timing later than the start signal outputted from the V2 start circuit 112
  • the start signal outputted from V4 start circuit 114 is outputted in the timing later than the start signal outputted from the V3 start circuit 113 .
  • the end signal outputted from the V3 end circuit 117 is outputted in the timing later than the end signal outputted from the V4 end circuit 118
  • the end signal outputted from the V2 end circuit 116 is outputted in the timing later than the end signal outputted from the V3 end circuit 117
  • the end signal outputted from the V1 end circuit 115 is outputted in the timing later than the end signal outputted from the V2 end circuit 116 .
  • V1 to V4 start circuits 111 to 114 V4 to V1 end circuits 115 to 118 , and V1 to V4 PWM circuits 119 to 122 will be described in detail.
  • V4 to V1 end circuits 115 to 118 V1 to V4 PWM circuits 119 to 122 will be described in detail.
  • FIG. 4 shows circuit configuration for performing arrangement so that leading edges of output waveforms to a plurality of modulation signal wiring of the multi-electron source 101 may be almost aligned.
  • V1 start circuit 111 comprises a decode circuit, an up counter, and a comparator
  • the V1 end circuit 115 comprises a decode circuit, an up counter, and a comparator
  • the V1 PWM generation circuit 119 comprises an RS flip-flop.
  • the data which is decoded with a control signal included in modulation data in the decode circuit in the V1 start circuit 111 is outputted.
  • a V1 start signal is outputted from the comparator in the V1 start circuit 111 . Since a signal wave form is determined every gradation value of modulation data, the decode circuit is set so that data corresponding to a gradation value of modulation data can be outputted.
  • the decode circuit since V1 which is the minimum level among levels corresponding to gradation values which are not 0 is used when a gradation value of modulation data is not zero, the decode circuit is constituted so that an output with which a start signal which specifies a start of a V1 output by comparison with an output value of the up counter is generated may be outputted when a gradation value of modulation data is not zero.
  • the decode circuit since it is determined every gradation value whether V2, V3, and V4 are required, the decode circuit compared with an output of the up counter also in the V2, V3, and V4 start circuits performs an outputs according to the gradation value of the modulation data.
  • the V1 PWM generation circuit 119 comprises an RS flip-flop.
  • a signal which starts in the input timing of a start signal and falls in the input timing of an end signal by the start signal being inputted into a set terminal S of this RS flip prop, and the end signal being inputted into a reset terminal R is outputted from the RS flip-flop as a PWM waveform TV 1 of the V1 PWM generation circuit 119 .
  • the RS flip-flop is used as the V1 PWM generation circuit 119 , a JK flip-flop or another circuit is sufficient here.
  • FIG. 5 shows circuit configuration for performing arrangement so that trailing edges of output waveforms to a plurality of modulation signal wiring of the multi-electron source 101 may be almost aligned.
  • the V1 start circuit 111 comprises a decode circuit, a down counter, and a comparator
  • the V1 end circuit 115 comprises a constant circuit, a down counter, and a comparator
  • the V1 PWM generation circuit 119 comprises an RS flip-flop.
  • V1 start circuit 111 , V1 end circuit 115 , and V1 PWM generation circuit 119 are shown, other start circuits, end circuits, and PWM generation circuits have the same configuration as the above-described circuits
  • the data which is decoded with a control signal included in modulation data in the decode circuit in the V1 start circuit 111 is outputted.
  • a V1 start signal is outputted from the comparator in the V1 start circuit 111 .
  • Data which is decoded with a control signal included in modulation data in the decode circuit in the V1 end circuit 111 is outputted.
  • circuit shown in either FIG. 4 or FIG. 5 can be used for the above-described PWM circuit 108 and the above-described output stage circuit 109 in response to each column-directional wiring of the multi-electron source 101 , as a third example, it is possible to alternately perform leading alignment and trailing alignment by providing the circuit in FIG. 4 and the circuit in FIG. 5 by turns in the column-directional wiring.
  • FIG. 6 shows an example of a circuit which is used every column-directional wiring as the output stage circuit 109 shown in FIGS. 2 and 3.
  • potentials V1 to V4 are 0 ⁇ V1 ⁇ V2 ⁇ V3 ⁇ V4, and they are outputted corresponding to PWM output waveforms TV 1 to TV 4 respectively.
  • Q 1 to Q 4 are transistors or paired transistors which output potentials V1 to V4 to an output terminal Out respectively by turning on.
  • PWM output waveforms TV 1 to TV 4 are applied to gates GV 1 to GV 4 of respective transistors Q 1 to Q 4 through a logical circuit so that two or more transistors out of Q 1 to Q 4 should not turn on simultaneously even if two or more among these are in H-level, and so that only the largest potential among potentials V1 to V4 corresponding to PWM output waveforms TV 1 to TV 4 which are in H-level is outputted to an output terminal Out.
  • FIG. 39 shows an example of waveforms of TV 4 to TV 1 , and GV 4 to GVO.
  • FIG. 7 shows the voltage/luminescence intensity characteristic of a light-emitting device whose voltage/luminescence intensity characteristic has nonlinear threshold characteristics like an LED or an electron emission device.
  • a horizontal axis denotes the applied voltage
  • a vertical axis denotes the luminescence intensity.
  • the luminescence of respective regions a, b, c and d in the time series chart of luminescence becomes equivalent by setting respective drive level potentials V1, V2, V3, and V4 so that the ratio of luminescence intensity may be set at 1:2:3:4.
  • unit driving waveform blocks A, B, C and D which consist of unit pulse width ⁇ t shown in the time series chart of a driving waveform, and unit levels, i.e., V4 ⁇ V3, V3 ⁇ V2, V2 ⁇ V1, and V1 ⁇ V0 by optimally setting respective drive level potentials V1, V2, V3, and V4.
  • potentials V1 to V4 are set so that the luminescence of respective unit driving waveform blocks A to D almost coincides with 1 LSB (one gradation) of luminance brightness data.
  • selection potential is given to a device via scan signal wiring as basic potential.
  • the selection potential is ⁇ 9.9 V. Therefore, regardless of the influence of voltage drop, when a level of a driving signal is V1, V2, V3, or V4, a voltage applied to a device is V1 ⁇ ( ⁇ 9.9) [V], V2 ⁇ ( ⁇ 9.9) [V], V3 ⁇ ( ⁇ 9.9) [V], or V4 ⁇ ( ⁇ 9.9) [V] respectively.
  • V0 is chosen so that V0 ⁇ ( ⁇ 9.9) [V] may become equal to or less than a drive voltage threshold of a device.
  • V0 is made to be ground potential.
  • this value is made to be the same as the drive threshold of a device here.
  • the drive voltage threshold of a device is 9.9 [V].
  • FIG. 8 shows a V14 driving waveform as an example of the geometry of a driving waveform for expressing gradations.
  • a signal of each gradation consists of the number of unit driving waveform blocks according to the number of gradations.
  • One gradation consists of one unit driving waveform block, two gradations do two unit driving waveform blocks, and N gradations do N unit driving waveform blocks.
  • a reverse unit driving waveform block in an N-th gradation denotes differential from a (N ⁇ 1)-th gradation.
  • a driving waveform in the N-th gradation is formed by adding a unit drive block to the location, where a driving waveform continues, in the driving waveform in the (N ⁇ 1)-th gradation.
  • FIG. 12 is an equivalent circuit diagram of a multi-light emitting device.
  • selection potential is applied to the row-directional wiring 2 to be selected and drive potential is applied to the column-directional wiring 3
  • a model was simplified for intuitive understanding, and simulation was performed by using a single-bit column-directional wiring model shown in FIG. 13.
  • Parasitic resistance was 10 ⁇
  • parasitic inductance was 300 nH
  • parasitic capacitance was 10 pF
  • a modulation circuit was formed by four kinds of power supplies, and MOS transistors.
  • FIG. 14 shows a voltage waveform in an end of the row-directional wiring
  • FIG. 15 shows a waveform of a current which flows into the column-directional wiring.
  • FIG. 17 shows a waveform of a current which flows into the column-directional wiring.
  • FIG. 18 shows another example of V14 waveforms.
  • Driving waveforms in FIG. 7 show an example in the case of setting respective drive level potentials V1, V2, V3, and V4 so that a ratio of luminescence intensity might be set to 1:2:3:4.
  • a current equal dividing method In an LED or an electron emission device, since luminescence intensity is proportional to a drive current in general, hereafter, this is called a current equal dividing method.
  • FIG. 19 shows the case that it is determined to make a ratio of V1, V2, V3, and V4 be 1:2:3:4, i.e., to make potential differences V4 ⁇ V3, V3 ⁇ V2, V2 ⁇ V1, and V1 ⁇ V0 (reference potential V0 of a driving waveform was made the same as a drive threshold of a device also here) fixed, and hereafter, this is called a voltage equal dividing method.
  • FIG. 19 shows the voltage/current (luminescence intensity) in the voltage equal dividing method.
  • a reverse unit driving waveform block in an N-th gradation denotes differential from a (N ⁇ 1)-th gradation.
  • a driving waveform in the N-th gradation is formed by adding a unit drive block to the location, where a driving waveform continues, in the driving waveform in the (N ⁇ 1)-th gradation.
  • Luminescence a to d of unit drive blocks A to D in FIG. 19 which are used in FIG. 18 have the relation of a ⁇ b ⁇ c ⁇ d. Therefore, although, in the waveform in FIG. 8 where the luminescence of unit drive blocks A to D is fixed, the difference between a third gradation and a fourth gradation is the unit drive block B, in the waveform in FIG. 18, a change between a third gradation and a fourth gradation, which are low gradations, is made small as the unit drive block A.
  • FIG. 20 shows linearity in the V14 driving.
  • FIG. 21 shows an example of Vn driving waveforms. This waveform is for performing driving with a waveform where a level of a driving waveform of data N is made to be k (k is an integer that is one or more, and less than n) when luminance brightness data consists of R bits and luminance brightness data is approximately 0 ⁇ N ⁇ (2 R ) (k/n ⁇ 1).
  • k is an integer that is one or more, and less than n
  • luminance brightness data consists of R bits
  • luminance brightness data is approximately 0 ⁇ N ⁇ (2 R ) (k/n ⁇ 1).
  • a level (level) is not carried until the number of unit drive blocks with a level of 1 (level 1; the minimum level) reaches a predetermined maximum number S (in this Example, 259) when increasing gradation, but when the number reaches the maximum number S and gradation is increased by one step next, carrying is performed by turning back so that the number of unit drive blocks in level 1 may become a number that is (S ⁇ k+2k+1)/(k+1) or more and may be the nearest to this, and the number of blocks in the one upper level may become smaller by two or three than that in a lower level.
  • a current per one light emitting device becomes 1 ⁇ 4 and a current which flows into the selected row-directional wiring also becomes r ⁇ i/4 by making an effective portion of amplitude of a pulse width modulation waveform be one fourth of a conventional pulse width modulation waveform, and making pulse width be four times.
  • FIG. 9 shows an rXs matrix type image display unit.
  • a current per one light-emitting device becomes i/4, and a current flowing into the selected row-directional wiring also becomes r ⁇ i/4.
  • FIG. 22 shows an example of modulation waveforms and a current, which flows in arbitrary scan wiring Yq, in V14 driving (front alignment) according to a first or a second Example.
  • FIG. 23 shows an example of modulation waveforms and a current, which flows in arbitrary scan wiring Yq, in Vn driving (front alignment) according to this Example. It can be seen that a peak of a current flowing into scan wiring in the Vn driving according to this Example is sharply reduced by equalizing the current.
  • FIG. 24 shows a current, which flows in arbitrary scan wiring (row-directional wiring) Yq, in the case of using front and back alignment in Vn driving. Furthermore, the current is equalized.
  • front alignment means to perform control so that a leading edge of a driving waveform becomes a first half in one selection period, and it is preferable to generate a first unit drive block in a predetermined slot in the first half of pulse width control.
  • back alignment means to perform control so that a trailing edge of a driving waveform becomes a second half in one selection period, and it is preferable to generate a last unit drive block in a predetermined slot in the second half of pulse width control.
  • predetermined slots when these predetermined slots are fixed, it is preferable to set a first slot in one selection period as a predetermined slot in the first half, and to set a last slot as a predetermined slot in the second half, but it is also good to set inner slots. Moreover, it is also good to set respective predetermined slots in the first half or second half according to the gradation or modulation waveform of a light emitting device to be driven through the column-directional wiring or other column-directional wiring every column-directional wiring. Alternatively, it is also good to set the same slot to all the column-directional wiring that drives them as respective predetermined slots in the first half or the second half according to the gradation or modulation waveform of a plurality of light emitting devices selected simultaneously.
  • FIG. 25 shows driving waveforms in new Vn driving.
  • these driving waveforms are arranged in good order such that unit drive blocks with a level of 1 (level 1) are first arranged until they reach the predetermined maximum number S (in this Example, 259), next, unit drive blocks in level 2 (potential V2) are arranged until they reach a (S ⁇ 1)-th slot from a second slot, ⁇ , and unit drive blocks in level k (potential Vk) are arranged until they reach a (S+1 ⁇ k)-th slot from a k-th slot.
  • FIG. 26 shows an example of modulation waveforms and a current, which flows in arbitrary scan wiring Yq, in new Vn driving (front alignment).
  • the current is equalized. Furthermore, by using front and back alignment in the new Vn driving, it becomes possible to make a current, which flows into the scan wiring Yq, almost uniform as shown in FIG. 27 within a 1H period.
  • Vn driving in FIG. 21, and the new Vn driving in FIG. 25, it is possible to set a modulation waveform such that a drive current may be equally divided as shown in FIG. 7, or to set it such that an effective portion of amplitude of drive potential may be equally divided as shown in FIG. 19.
  • VO potential whose potential difference from basic potential serves as a drive voltage threshold of a device, V1, V2, V3, and V4 equal.
  • FIG. 19 shows the relation between the applied voltage and the luminescence in the case of equally dividing an effective portion of amplitude of drive potential. It can be seen that the luminescence of unit driving waveform blocks A, B, C and D which consist of unit pulse width and unit levels which are shown in a time series chart of a driving waveform does not become equal.
  • FIG. 20 shows the relation between the luminance brightness and the data in the cases of current equal dividing and voltage equal dividing in the V14 driving. Although linearity is spoiled a little in a low luminance brightness region, monotonicity is guaranteed and this can be treated by data correction etc.
  • the relation between the luminance brightness data and the luminance brightness becomes a curve deeper than the 2.2nd power of reverse ⁇ characteristics (resolution of luminance brightness becomes high in a low luminance brightness region), usually used, by setting the voltage equal dividing of V1 to V4 which can minimize ringing generation. In consequence, it becomes possible to enhance the resolution of luminance brightness in low to middle luminance brightness at the time of reverse ⁇ conversion.
  • the present invention it becomes possible to provide a driving waveform and a drive method that make it possible in a low-cost drive circuit to realize fine gradation, to reserve the monotonicity of gradation, to realize the uniform luminescence of a light emitting device, to reduce radiated noise, and to stabilize a driving waveform.
  • a light emitting device control method which can reduce the bias of luminance brightness distribution in an inexpensive drive circuit.

Abstract

The present invention discloses an invention about a drive waveform for driving an image display unit. In particular, the present invention discloses the structure of using as a drive waveform a drive waveform signal which is level controlled by a plural of discontinuous levels including a minimum level which is a level corresponding to luminance brightness gradation data which is not 0, at least one non-minimum level which is a level corresponding to larger luminance brightness gradation data, and an intermediate level between the above-described minimum level and the above-described non-minimum level, and is given pulse width control with discontinuous pulse width, and which has a portion, which is controlled with the above-described minimum level, in its trailing edge, and a portion, which is controlled with the above-described intermediate level just before the former portion, when it has the portion controlled by the above-described non-minimum level.

Description

    BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
  • 1. Field of the Invention [0001]
  • The present invention relates to a drive circuit for generating a driving waveform corresponding to brightness data; a display device therewith; a driving method for generating the driving waveform; and more specifically to a method of driving a light-emitting device in an image display device provided with an image display panel having the matrix wiring of a plurality of light-emitting devices. [0002]
  • 2. Related Background Art [0003]
  • Up to now, two kinds of electron emission devices, that is, a hot cathode device and a cold cathode device are known. Among these, as a cold cathode device, for example, a surface conduction electron-emitting device, a field emission type device (hereafter, an FE type device), a metal/insulating film/metal type discharge device (hereafter, an MIM type device), etc. are known. As a surface conduction electron-emitting device, for example, a device disclosed in an article of “M. I. Elinson, Radio Eng., Electron Phys., 10,1290 (1965)”, and other examples described later are known. [0004]
  • A surface conduction electron-emitting device uses a phenomenon that electron emission occurring by letting a current in a thin film with a small area, which is formed on a substrate, in parallel with a film surface. As this surface conduction electron-emitting device, besides the device by Elinson et al. where an SnO[0005] 2 thin film is used, a device consisting of an Au thin film (G. Dittmer: Thin Solid Films, 9,317 (1972)), a device consisting of In2O3/SnO2 thin film (M. Hartwell and C. G. Fonstad: IEEE Trans. ED Conf., 519 (1975)), a device consisting of a carbon thin film (Hisashi Araki, et al.: Vacuum, 26th volume, No. 1, 22 (1983)), and the like were reported.
  • As a typical example of the device structure of these surface conduction electron-emitting devices, a plan of the above-mentioned device by M. Hartwell et al. is shown in FIG. 28. In the figure, [0006] reference numeral 3001 denotes a substrate and numeral 3004 denotes an electro conductive thin film made of metallic oxide formed by sputtering. The electro conductive thin film 3004 is formed in H-shaped plane geometry as shown in the figure. An electron emission part 3005 is formed by performing the energization processing which is called below-mentioned energization forming, to this electro conductive thin film 3004. A gap L in the figure is set within 0.5 and 1 mm, and w is set at 0.1 mm. In addition, although the electron emission unit 3005 is shown in rectangular geometry in the center of the electro conductive thin film 3004 from convenience of illustration, this is schematic and is not necessarily expressing the location or geometry of an actual electron emission unit faithfully.
  • In the above-described surface conduction electron-emitting devices including the device by M. Hartwell et al., it is common to form the [0007] electron emission unit 3005 by performing the energization processing, called energization forming, to the electro conductive thin film 3004 before performing electron emission. Namely, the energization forming means to form the electron emission unit 3005 in a highly resistive state electrically by applying a fixed DC voltage or, for example, a DC voltage, which increases at a very slow rate which is about 1 V/min, to both ends of the electro conductive thin film 3004, to locally break or deform the electro conductive thin film 3004, or to change its quality. In addition, a crack arises in a portion of the electro conductive thin film 3004 which is locally broken, deformed or changed in quality. When a proper voltage is applied to the electro conductive thin film 3004 after the above-described energization forming, electron emission occurs near the above-described crack.
  • As examples of FE type devices, for example, devices reported by the articles of “W. P. Dyke & W. W. Dolan, Field emission, Advance in Electron Physics, 8, 89 (1956)”, and “C. A. Spindt, Physical properties of thin film field emission cathodes with molybdenum cones, J. Appl. Phys., 47, 5248 (1976)” are known. [0008]
  • As a typical example of device structure of an FE type, a sectional view of the above-mentioned device by C. A. Spindt et al. is shown in FIG. 29. In this figure, [0009] reference numeral 3010 denotes a substrate, numeral 3011 does emitter wiring made of conductive material, numeral 3012 does an emitter cone, numeral 3013 does an insulating layer, and numeral 3014 does a gate electrode. This device makes field emission occur from an end portion of the emitter cone 3012 by applying a proper voltage between the emitter cone 3012 and gate electrode 3014. In addition, as another device structure of the FE type device, there is also an example of arranging an emitter and gate electrodes nearly in parallel with a substrate plane on a substrate except the laminated structure as shown in FIG. 29.
  • As an example of an MIM type device, for example, a device reported in an article of “C. A. Mead, Operation of tunnel emission Devices, and J. Appl. Phys., 32, 646 (1961)” is known. A typical example of the device structure of an MIM type device is shown in FIG. 30. This figure is a sectional view, and in the figure, [0010] reference numeral 3020 denotes a substrate, numeral 3021 does a lower electrode made of metal, numeral 3022 does a thin insulating layer with the thickness of about 100 Å, and numeral 3023 does an upper electrode made of metal with the thickness of about 80 to 300 Å. In the MIM type device, electron emission is made to occur from a surface of the upper electrode 3023 by applying a proper voltage between the upper electrode 3023 and lower electrode 3021.
  • Since the above-described cold cathode device can obtain electron emission at low temperature in comparison with a hot cathode device, it does not need a heater for heating. Hence, since its structure is simpler than that of a hot cathode device, it is possible to produce a fine device. In addition, even if plenty of devices are arranged in high density on a substrate, it is seldom to generate problems such as a thermofusion of a substrate. Moreover, differently from slow response speed of a hot cathode device due to an action by the heating of a heater, the cold cathode device also has an advantage that response speed is quick. For this reason, researches for applying a cold cathode device have been done actively. [0011]
  • For example, a surface conduction electron-emitting device has an advantage that plenty of devices can be formed over a large area since the surface conduction electron-emitting device is simple in structure and is easily produced. Then, as disclosed in, for example, Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 64-31332 applied by the present applicant, methods for arranging and driving many devices have been studied. In addition, as for the application of surface conduction electron-emitting devices, image formation apparatuses such as an image display unit and an image recording device, a source of a charged beam, and the like have been studied. [0012]
  • In particular, as for the application to image display units, as disclosed in, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,066,883, Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 2-257551, Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 4-28137, and the like, image display units where a surface conduction electron-emitting device and phosphor which emits light by irradiation of an electron beam are combined and used have been studied. The image display units where a surface conduction electron-emitting device and phosphor are combined and used are expected in characteristics superior to those of conventional image display units where other methods are used. For example, even if it is compared with an LCD which has spread in recent years, it can be said that it is excellent in terms of not requiring a backlight since it is a spontaneous light type unit, and in terms of a wide viewing angle. [0013]
  • In addition, a method of arranging and driving plenty of FE type devices is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,904,895. In addition, as an example of applying an FE type device to an image display unit, for example, a flat plate type display unit reported by R. Meyer et al. is known (R. Meyer: Recent Development on Microtips Display at LETI, Tech. Digest of 4th Int. Vacuum Microelectronics Conf., Nagahama, pp. 6-9 (1991)). [0014]
  • In addition, as an example of applying plenty of MIM type devices to an image display unit is disclosed in Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 3-55738. Furthermore, a unit where an EL (electroluminescence) device is used is disclosed in, for example, Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 09-281928 as an image display unit where a device other than an electron emission device is used. [0015]
  • The present inventor et al. has tried, for example, a multi-electron beam source by an electric wiring method shown in FIG. 31. Thus, it is a multi-electron beam source where plenty of electron emission devices are arranged two-dimensionally, and are wired in a matrix as shown in the figure. [0016]
  • In the figure, [0017] reference numeral 1 schematically denotes an electron emission device, numeral 2 does row-directional wiring, and numeral 3 does column-directional wiring. The row-directional wiring 2 and the column-directional wiring 3 have wiring resistance 4 and 5, wiring inductance 6 and 7, and wiring capacitance 8. In addition, although the device is shown in a 4×4 matrix for the convenience of illustration, of course, the scale of the matrix is not necessarily restricted to this, but in the case of, for example, a multi-electron beam source for an image display unit, a sufficient number of devices for performing desired image display are arranged and wired.
  • In a multi-electron beam source where the matrix wiring of electron emission devices is performed, proper electric signals are applied to the wirings in the row and column directions so as to make a desired electron beam output. [0018]
  • A pulse width modulation waveform is shown in FIG. 32. For example, so as to drive electron emission devices in an arbitrary row in a matrix, selection potential Vs is applied to the wiring in the direction of a row selected, and non-selective potential Vns is simultaneously applied to the row-directional wirings not selected. Drive potential Ve for outputting an electron beam is applied to column-directional wirings in synchronizing with this. According to this method, a voltage of Ve-Vs is applied to the electron emission devices in the row selected, and a voltage of Ve-Vns is applied to the electron emission devices in the non-selective rows. An electron beam with desired intensity is outputted only from an electron emission device in a selected row if Ve, Vs, and Vns are made to be proper potential. In addition, since the response speed of a cold cathode device is high, if the length of time for applying drive potential Ve is changed, it is possible to change the length of time when the electron beam is outputted. Similarly, it is possible to control an electron beam also by a method which is called level modulation and which controls luminance brightness by changing potentials and current values which are applied to the column-directional wirings. [0019]
  • By the way, in a display unit having the effective pixel count of 1920×1080, a frame rate of 60 Hz, and 10-bit gradation, in the case of a pulse level modulation, in letting a level of energy, applied to a device, be Pi, the resolution of Pi/2[0020] 10=Pi/1024 is needed. In voltage drive, since pi becomes several volts, the resolution of several millivolts is required in a driving waveform over the whole screen of 1920×1080 pixels. It is difficult to realize this value when considering characteristics of an IC, a printed circuit board, and a power supply which constitute a drive circuit.
  • On the other hand, in the case of a pulse width modulation, time for driving one scanning line is 1/(60×1080)≈15 μsec. When 10-bit pulse width modulation is performed, minimum pulse width is 1/(60×1080×210)≈15 ns, and hence, the minimum pulse width resolution of 15 ns is needed. [0021]
  • However, wiring shown in FIG. 31 is equivalent to a low-pass filter with a cut-off frequency determined by wiring inductance (L), wiring capacitance (c), and wiring resistance (R). When signal wiring and display wiring which have such low-pass characteristics are driven by a line sequential-pulse width modulation (PWM) driving system consisting of frequency spectrum components higher than a cut-off frequency, as shown in FIG. 33, leading and trailing waveform of a PWM waveform which is applied to a device become dull, and hence, display quality in low luminance brightness is degraded. In particular, a synthetic waveform with an output waveform of a [0022] scan circuit 11 which is applied to the electron emission device 1 becomes a waveform whose level becomes low when the pulse width modulation driving waveform at low gradation is applied from an information electrode drive circuit 10. That is, since a level of a driving waveform which consists of only high frequency spectrum components, that is, a pulse width modulation driving waveform at low gradation becomes low, it is not possible to display an image at desired gradation in a low gradation region.
  • In addition, also when a constant current pulse with short time length is supplied from a control constant current source to a multi-electron source where great many electron emission devices are wired in a matrix, electrons are hardly emitted. When a constant current pulse is supplied for a comparatively long period, of course, electrons begin to be emitted, but long leading time was needed until electron emission began. [0023]
  • FIG. 33 is a time chart for explaining this, and as shown in the figure, even if a control constant current source supplies a short current pulse, a current If hardly flows into an electron emission device. In addition, even when a long pulse is supplied, the drive current If which flows into an electron emission device becomes a waveform with large leading time. Although a cold cathode type electron emission device itself has high-speed responding capability, a current waveform supplied to the electron emission device becomes dull, and hence, a waveform of an emission current Ie is also deformed as a result. [0024]
  • In a multi-electron source where simple matrix wiring is performed, as the scale of a matrix is enlarged, parasitic capacitance (wiring capacity) increases in connection with it. Main portions of parasitic capacitors exist in intersections of row-directional wiring and column-directional wiring, and this equivalent circuit is shown in FIG. 34. When a control constant [0025] current source 9 connected to column-directional wiring 3 starts to supply a constant current Il, the current is spent for charging a parasitic capacitor 8 in a starting stage not to serve as a drive current of the electron emission device 1. For this reason, the effective response speed of the electron emission device falls.
  • In addition, as for voltage drive, there are the following troubles to be solved. Generally, on a display unit using a device where a current flows with drive as a light emitting device, for example, LED, EL, FED, SED, etc., wiring resistance is designed to be low. Hence, its equivalent circuit is a model which is shown in FIG. 31 and is constituted by parasitic capacitance, parasitism resistance, and parasitism inductance. If a conventional voltage driving method is applied to such a circuit, since a charging current i flows into a parasitic capacitance by the application of a voltage, a leading edge of a driving waveform becomes dull. Furthermore, by a self-induction action of the parasitism inductance, electromotive force U=—Lx(di/dt) arises, overshoot and ringing arise, and the application of an abnormal voltage to a light emitting device arises. [0026]
  • In recent years, demand for display units with a large area, high resolution, and fine gradation has been remarkable, parasitic inductance and parasitic capacitance of wiring have increased in connection with it, and hence, elimination of gradations in a low luminance brightness region which is caused by dullness, an overshoot, and ringing of a leading edge of a driving waveform have become increasingly important problems to be solved. [0027]
  • In addition, it has become a problem that it becomes impossible that a driving waveform by simple pulse width control and pulse height value control guarantees the monotonicity of gradation because of changes and dispersion of voltage/luminescence intensity characteristics of light emitting devices. [0028]
  • In addition, for example, as disclosed in Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 09-319327, a method and the like have been performed, the method in which a charge voltage is applied in addition to a drive current pulse by a control current source for supplying a drive current pulse to the above-described cold cathode device, a voltage source for charging parasitic capacitors of a multi-electron source at high speed, and charge voltage application means of electrically connecting the above-described voltage source with the above-described column-directional wiring in synchronizing it with an leading edge of the above-described drive current pulse, until charging to the parasitic capacitance of wiring is almost completed. When such drive is performed, it becomes possible to guarantee the linearity of gradation. [0029]
  • In addition, in Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 8-22261, a driving waveform which has a period longer than a period of a time slot of a conventional PWM waveform is realized by dividing each word of a digital image signal into a plurality of sub words and assigning a PWM waveform, whose level is low, to a lower sub word, and a PWM waveform, whose level is high, to a higher sub word, and the deterioration of image display quality in low luminance brightness is prevented. [0030]
  • In addition, in Japanese Patent Application No. 10-39825, a problem of necessity of frequency increase of a PWM operating frequency which poses a problem with an increase of gradations is solved by making it possible to reduce a frequency in a pulse width modulation circuit with a drive method of having second pulse width modulation output means of outputting a binary signal whose high and low voltages are V1 and V2 respectively according to a luminance signal, and second pulse width signal output means of cutting the above-described binary signal in predetermined pulse width according to the above-described luminance signal. [0031]
  • Furthermore, in Japanese Patent Application No. 11-015430, fine gradation is easily realized by using a pulse driving waveform including information on M X N gradations, defined by pulse width control corresponding to M gradations, and pulse height value control corresponding to N gradations, as a voltage pulse. [0032]
  • However, in the drive by the conventional pulse width modulation, there is a further possibility of inducing large electromagnetic wave noise, i.e., the spurious radiation of an electromagnetic wave at leading and trailing edges of a driving waveform depending on gradation. [0033]
  • In addition, in a multi-electron beam source where many electron emission devices described above are arranged in a matrix, there is a problem that a voltage applied to each device becomes smaller as the device is apart from its feeding terminal due to a voltage drop caused by an influence of its wiring resistance, and in consequence, the discharge electron distribution of each device does not become uniform. Then, when this multi-electron emission device is applied to an image display unit, there is a problem that image quality deteriorates due to a voltage drop caused by a wiring resistor. [0034]
  • This will be described by using FIGS. 34 and 35. FIG. 34 shows an example of a substrate of a multi-electron beam source. In the figure, [0035] reference numeral 1 denotes an electron emission device, numeral 2 does a selection electrode (row-directional wiring), numeral 3 does an information electrode (column-directional wiring), numeral 9 does a selection circuit, numeral 10 does a modulation circuit, and numeral 12 does the substrate.
  • In addition, FIG. 35 is a perspective view of an image display panel where the [0036] substrate 11 of a multi-electron beam source shown in FIG. 34 is used. In the figure, reference numeral 13 denotes a metal back, numeral 14 does a fluorescent screen, numeral 15 does a faceplate, and numeral 16 does a current from an electron source.
  • Now, it is assumed that a [0037] certain selection electrode 2 is selected and all the pixels connected to the selection electrode lit up. An equivalent circuit at this time is shown in FIG. 36. In the figure, reference numeral 16 denotes a current component which flows from an information electrode to the selection electrode through an electron emission device, and numeral 4 does a resistive component of the selection electrode.
  • A current flowing into the selection electrode to each device is made into the same value If, and it is assumed that the resistance of a selection electrode per pixel is rf. Potential on the selection electrode at this time is calculated. [0038]
  • A current which flows into Rf[0039] 5 is If, and an amount of a voltage drop by Rf5 is If·rf. A current which flows into Rf4 is 2·If, and an amount of a voltage drop by Rf4 is 2·IF·rf. Similarly, an amount of a voltage drop in each resistive component is calculated, and the result of calculating the potential of each portion on the selection electrode is shown in FIG. 37. In addition, here, the case of Ve>Vs is shown.
  • A remarkable point is that potential rises as a place is apart from a feeding point since currents flow into the [0040] selection electrode 2 when potential Vs is outputted from the selection circuitry 9 which is the feeding point, and the potential rises at the most distant edge by 21·If·rf. FIG. 38A, 38B and 38C show driving waveforms applied to a pixel in the most distant edge at this time. In the figure, FIG. 38A shows a potential waveform applied to a selection electrode, FIG. 38B shows a potential waveform applied to an information electrode, and FIG. 38C shows a voltage waveform applied to the selected electron emission device. It can be seen that a voltage applied to the device falls because selection potential becomes Vs′ from Vs.
  • Although this voltage dispersion does not pose a problem so much when a resistive component of a selection electrode is very small, for example, if the resistive component of a selection electrode is large due to an increase of screen size of an image display unit etc., the dispersion of the voltage cannot be disregarded. In addition, when a pixel count increases and the current which flows into a selection electrode increases, the voltage dispersion becomes large. [0041]
  • When this voltage dispersion arises, a voltage applied to an electron emission device differs every device, and in particular, an electron emission device near a feeding point and an electron emission device which is apart from the feeding point are not given the same voltage, and hence, difference arises in the amount of electron emission. This appears as the difference of luminance brightness between pixels which are elements which emit light by an electron beam emitted from its electron emission device, and leads to the degradation of display quality as an image display unit. [0042]
  • It is disclosed in Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 10-112391 to make plenty of light emitting devices emit light uniformly, and to realize excellent characteristics as an image display unit by paying attention to the resistance of a wiring electrode and a current flowing in the wiring electrode in an X-Y matrix type organic EL display unit, adopting a drive method of performing driving with a current source connected to a voltage source with a drive voltage of Vcc while providing a data electrode in low resistance wiring and a scan electrode in high resistance wiring, and making the drive voltage Vcc at this time be equal to or more than a specific voltage satisfying conditions under which the current source surely performs constant current operation even if there is dispersion in wiring resistance depending on a location of a light emitting device which is a pixel. [0043]
  • In addition, it is mentioned in Japanese Patent No. 3049061 to divide a trailing edge of a signal, applied to modulation wiring (information signal wiring), into a plurality of steps. In addition, in Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 7-181917, a method is mentioned, the method which is for generating a driving waveform by using two or more voltages corresponding to a singular or plural number of unit drive blocks and stacking these unit drive blocks in the pulse width and level directions. [0044]
  • SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
  • An aspect of the drive circuit of a light-emitting device according to the present invention is configured as follows. To emit the light-emitting device with the brightness corresponding to brightness data, the drive circuit drives the light-emitting device by the driving waveform whose pulse width is controlled in a unit of slot width Δt and whose level in each slot is controlled at least in n stages of A[0045] 1 to An (where n is an integer equal to or larger than 2, and 0<A1<A2< . . . <An). In the circuit, all driving waveforms having a rising portion up to a predetermined level Ak (where k is an integer equal to or larger than 2 and equal to and smaller than n) rise up to the predetermined level Ak through each level in order at least by one slot from a level A1 to a level Ak−1.
  • According to the aspect of the present invention, the light-emitting device can be correctly driven by stepwise raising the driving waveform. When the rising portion of the driving waveform has a level higher than the level Ak, it is not desired to raise the driving waveform suddenly after the level A[0046] k has been reached. Therefore, in the above mentioned aspect of the present invention, it is desired that the level Ak is the maximum level of the driving waveform (at least in the rising portion).
  • Another aspect of the drive circuit of a light-emitting device according to the present invention can be configured as follows. To emit the light-emitting device with the brightness corresponding to brightness data, the drive circuit drives the light-emitting device by the driving waveform whose pulse width is controlled in a unit of slot width Δt and whose level in each slot is controlled at least in n stages of A[0047] 1 to An (where n is an integer equal to or larger than 2, and 0<A1<A2< . . . <An). In the circuit, all driving waveforms having a falling portion from a predetermined level Ak (where k is an integer equal to or larger than 2 and equal to and smaller than n) falls from the predetermined level Ak through each level from a level
  • A[0048] k−1 to a level A1 in order at least by one slot.
  • A further aspect of the drive circuit of a light-emitting device according to the present invention can be configured as follows. To emit the light-emitting device with the brightness corresponding to brightness data, the drive circuit drives the light-emitting device by the driving waveform whose pulse width is controlled in a unit of slot width Δt and whose level in each slot is controlled at least in n stages of A[0049] 1 to An (where n is an integer equal to or larger than 2, and 0<A1<A2< . . . <An). In the circuit, the driving waveform has: a rising portion up to a predetermined level Ak (where k indicates an integer equal to or larger than 2 and equal to or smaller than n) through each level from a level A1 to a level Ak−1 in order at least by one slot; and a falling portion from the level Ak through each level from the level Ak−1 to the level A1 in order at least by one slot (hereinafter referred to as a third driving method).
  • A light-emitting device can be correctly driven using the drive circuit according to this aspect of the present invention. [0050]
  • In each of the above mentioned aspects according to the present invention, the level immediately before rising up to the level A[0051] 1 in the rising portion of the driving waveform can be a value at which the light-emitting device cannot be practically driven. Similarly, the level immediately after falling from the level A1 in the falling portion of the driving waveform can be a value at which the light-emitting device cannot be practically driven. The level at which the light-emitting device cannot be practically driven refers to a value at which the light-emitting device does not emit light corresponding to the lowest level of gray scale of brightness data when one slot of the level is input. Practically, the level which does not exceed a drive threshold of the light-emitting device is selected.
  • Assume that the light-emitting device is assigned a basic potential (for example, the selected potential for use in the matrix drive described later). When the light-emitting device is assigned the driving waveform according to this aspect of the present invention, the potential difference between the potential corresponding to each portion of the driving waveform (the potential when a level is controlled based on the potential control, or the potential for passing a current when the level is controlled based on the current control) and the basic potential is assigned to the light-emitting device. When the potential difference generates non-ignorable light emission on the display corresponding to the brightness data, the level indicates the drive threshold of the light-emitting device. [0052]
  • A desired configuration can be obtained by setting the level at which the light-emitting device is not practically driven before the driving waveform rises up to A[0053] 1 equal to the level at which the light-emitting device is not practically driven after the driving waveform falls from A1. If the level (high or low) of a level is determined, a higher level refers to a value which provides more driving energy for a light-emitting device, but does not always relate to the level of the potential. For example, when predetermined potential is assigned as basic potential and the potential of a driving waveform is lower than the predetermined potential, the level whichever has lower potential is higher.
  • With the above mentioned configuration, a driving waveform can be preferably set by setting as follows the relationship between a first driving waveform and a second driving waveform obtained by increasing/decreasing the driving energy of the first driving waveform driving a light-emitting device. That is, when the slot in which the driving waveform rises up to the level A[0054] 1 is defined as a first slot, the levels of the first to a (k−1)th slot are respectively A1 to Ak−1, the level of a k-th slot and a (Nk+k−1)th slot is Ak, and the levels of an (Nk+k)th to an (Nk+2(k−1))th slots are level Ak−1 to level A1, based on which another driving waveform is obtained by one level increasing driving energy for driving the light-emitting device into the level A1 for the (Nk+2k−1)th slot, thereafter one level increasing the driving energy by increasing the level from A1 to A2 in the Nk+2(k−1)th slot, and increasing the driving energy by increasing the level from Ak−1 to Ak in the (Nk+k)th slot.
  • That is, the driving waveform obtained by one level increasing the driving energy of the driving waveform for driving the light-emitting device having a falling portion to a level at which the light-emitting device cannot be practically driven through each level from a level A[0055] k to a value smaller than the level Ak in order by one slot has a waveform obtained by increasing to Al the level of the slot subsequent to the slot having the level A1 in the falling portion of the driving waveform in the preceding stage, thereafter one level increasing the energy for driving the light-emitting device with one level increasing the level of the slot before the one in which the level is one level increased in the driving waveform in the two stages before.
  • The aspect of the present invention defines the waveform of a drive signal. When the aspect of the present invention relates to the second driving waveform obtained by one level increasing the drive energy of the first driving waveform corresponding to a certain level of energy, it does not limit a timing of applying the first and second driving waveforms in a predetermined period. For example, in the configuration in which the first driving waveform is set up from the second slot of a predetermined period when the first driving waveform is used, when the second driving waveform is used, the second driving waveform is included in an embodiment of setting up the second driving waveform from the first slot in the predetermined period. That is, the embodiment of the present invention is not limited to the configuration in which the timing of the rise of the first driving waveform is the same as the timing of the rise of the second driving waveform in a predetermined period (for example, a selection period in the matrix drive as described later). [0056]
  • Each of the above mentioned aspects of the present invention can also be described as follows. That is, according to a driving method of the present invention, the driving waveform obtained by one level increasing the driving energy of the driving waveform for driving the light-emitting device having a falling portion to a level at which the light-emitting device cannot be practically driven through each level from a level A[0057] k to a value smaller than the level Ak in order by one slot has a waveform obtained by increasing to A1 the level of the slot subsequent to the slot having the level A1 in the falling portion of the driving waveform in the preceding stage, thereafter one level increasing the energy for driving the light-emitting device with one level increasing the level of the slot before the one in which the level is one level increased in the driving waveform in the two stages before.
  • Thus, by setting the relationship among the driving waveforms as described above, a change of a level in the consecutive slots in the falling portions of the respective driving waveforms can be within one level. [0058]
  • Especially, the relationship in which the driving waveform obtained by one level increasing the energy for driving the light-emitting device of the preceding driving waveform has the waveform obtained by one level increasing the level of the slot before the one in which the level is one level increased over the driving waveform of the two stages before can preferably apply the configuration in which the driving waveform depending on the relationship is satisfied by a series of driving waveforms up to the driving waveform whose level of the slot in which the level is increased from the driving waveform in the preceding stage and has a level one level higher than the level A[0059] k. The driving waveform to be obtained by one level increasing the last driving waveform of the series of driving waveforms can be obtained as a waveform obtained by changing into A1 the level of the slot subsequent to the slot having the level A1 in the falling portion of the last driving waveform.
  • Furthermore, the following process can be applied when the level A[0060] k is the maximum permissible level, or when the update of the level is to be avoided if possible. That is, the relationship in which the driving waveform obtained by one level increasing the energy for driving the light-emitting device of the preceding driving waveform has the waveform obtained by one level increasing the level of the slot before the one in which the level is one level increased over the driving waveform of the two stages before can preferably apply the configuration in which the driving waveform depending on the relationship is satisfied by a series of driving waveforms up to the driving waveform whose level of the slot in which the level is increased from the driving waveform in the preceding stage and has a level one level higher than the level Ak. The driving waveform to be obtained by one level increasing the last driving waveform of the series of driving waveforms can be obtained as a waveform obtained by changing into A1 the level of the slot subsequent to the slot having the level A1 in the falling portion of the last driving waveform.
  • Furthermore, a series of driving waveforms having different driving energy in each stage can be set as follows. That is, when the slot in which the driving waveform rises up to the level A[0061] 1 is defined as a first slot, the levels of the first to a (k−1)th slot are respectively A1 to Ak−1, the level of a k-th slot and a (Nk+k−1)th slot is Ak, and the levels of an (Nk+k)th to an (Nk+2(k−1))th slots are level Ak−1 to level A1, based on which another driving waveform is obtained by one level decreasing driving energy for driving the light-emitting device from Ak to Ak−1 for the k-th slot, thereafter one level decreasing the driving energy by increasing the level from Ak−1 to Ak−2 in the (k−1)th slot, and increasing the driving energy by increasing the level from A1 to the level at which the light-emitting device cannot be practically driven in the first slot.
  • The aspect of the present invention defines the waveform of a drive signal. When the aspect of the present invention relates to the second driving waveform obtained by one level increasing the drive energy of the first driving waveform corresponding to a certain level of energy, it does not limit a timing of applying the first and second driving waveforms in a predetermined period. For example, in the configuration in which the first driving waveform is set up from the second slot of a predetermined period when the first driving waveform is used, when the second driving waveform is used, the second driving waveform is included in an embodiment of setting up the second driving waveform from the first slot in the predetermined period. That is, the embodiment of the present invention is not limited to the configuration in which the timing of the rise of the first driving waveform is the same as the timing of the fall of the second driving waveform in a predetermined period (for example, a selection period in the matrix drive as described later). [0062]
  • The embodiment can be described as follows. That is, a driving waveform having a rising portion up to a level A[0063] k in order at least by one slot from each level lower than the level Ak can be obtained by a driving waveform having one level decreased energy for driving the light-emitting device as having a waveform indicating the level Ak−1 of the slot which is subsequent to the slot having the level Ak−1 in the rising portion in the preceding driving waveform and whose level is Ak, and the driving waveform having one level decreased energy for driving the light-emitting device has a one level decreased waveform from the level of the slot before the one from which the level of the driving waveform is one level decreased.
  • In each of the above mentioned aspects of the present invention, it is preferable that the level in the slot between two slots having the level A[0064] k is also Ak. Since the levels can be maintained in the portion other than the rising and falling portions, the light-emitting device can be more correctly driven and a driving waveform can be easily generated.
  • The following configuration is also preferable. That is, in the driving waveform including two slots having the level A[0065] k and including between the two slots other slots having the level Ak, with the level Ak including the case in which k=1, and smaller than An, and the having two or three slots having the level Ak by one level increasing the driving energy, the driving waveform having one level further increased driving energy has the level of the central slot in the three slots having the level Ak+1 changed from Ak.
  • It is also desired that the driving waveform obtained by increasing the driving energy for driving the light-emitting device more than a predetermined driving waveform increases the pulse width rather than raise the maximum level. [0066]
  • By prioritizing the increase of a pulse width over the raise of the level when the driving energy is increased, an effect of decreasing a current flowing in a moment can be expected. In this process, a preferred configuration for prioritizing the increase of the pulse width over the raise of the level is configured such that the maximum level cannot be exceeded when the driving energy is increased by increasing the pulse width of any level with the raising or falling through each level at least by one slot maintained. [0067]
  • The following configuration is also preferred. That is, the driving waveform obtained when the maximum level of the driving waveform is set high by one level increasing the driving energy for driving the light-emitting device is configured such that the maximum level can continue as much as possible by increasing by one the number of unit driving waveform blocks defined by the level difference A[0068] n−An−1, . . . , or An−A1 or the level difference between the level A1 and the level which is the driving threshold of the light-emitting device, and the slot width Δt.
  • By prioritizing the increase of a pulse width over the raise of the level when the driving energy is increased, an effect of decreasing a current flowing in a moment can be expected. However, in the configuration of increasing the pulse width to increase the driving energy, it is necessary to use a higher level in a predetermined stage when the pulse width of a driving waveform is limited. When the level, especially the maximum level, is seriously considered, it is desired that the unit driving waveform blocks forming the driving waveform can be arranged such that the maximum level can continue for the longest possible period in the range of a stepped rise, a stepped fall, or both of them. [0069]
  • Furthermore, the following configuration is also preferable. That is, the driving waveform obtained by increasing the driving energy for driving the light-emitting device on a predetermined driving waveform is configured by adding unit driving waveform blocks defined by the level difference A[0070] n−An−1, . . . , or An−A1 or the level difference between the level A1 and the level which is the driving threshold of the light-emitting device, and the slot width Δt by priority in the position where the maximum level Ak including k=1 can be lower. Especially, the driving waveform obtained by increasing the driving energy for driving the light-emitting device on a predetermined driving waveform is configured by adding unit driving waveform blocks defined by the level difference An−An−1, . . . , or A2−A1 or the level difference between the level A1 and the level which is the driving threshold of the light-emitting device, and the slot width Δt by priority in the position where the maximum level Ak including k=1 can be lower, and the maximum level can continue the longer.
  • Practically, in the driving waveform whose maximum level A[0071] k which is the number of slots i is S−2(k−1) with the largest number of slots defined as S, the driving waveform obtained by one level further increasing the driving energy by adding the unit driving waveform blocks is the driving waveform having the level of an arbitrary slot in the (k+1)th to the (S−k)th slots changed from Ak to Ak+1. The slot in which the level is changed from Ak to Ak+1 is, for example, either the (k+1)th slot or the (S−k)th slot.
  • The driving waveform according to the present invention obtained by increasing the maximum level of the driving waveform by one level increasing the driving energy for driving the light-emitting device on a predetermined driving waveform can be an intermediate configuration between a configuration of rearranging the unit driving waveform blocks such that the maximum level can continue as much as possible by increasing by one the number of the unit driving waveform blocks which is used by the predetermined driving waveform, and a configuration obtained by adding by priority the unit driving waveform block in the position where the maximum level A[0072] k including k=1 can be lower. That is, the driving waveform whose maximum level is increased by one level increasing the driving energy for driving the light-emitting device on a predetermined driving waveform is obtained by rearranging the unit driving waveform blocks such that the maximum level can continue for at least two slots by increasing the number of the unit driving waveform blocks by one over the number used for the predetermined driving waveform.
  • Furthermore, the present invention also includes the configuration in which the maximum level does not continue for two or more slots. That is, the driving waveform obtained by increasing the maximum level by one level increasing the driving energy for driving the light-emitting device on a predetermined driving waveform is obtained by rearranging the unit driving waveform blocks such that the maximum level can continue for two or more slots by increasing by one the number of the unit driving waveform blocks over the number used in the predetermined driving waveform. [0073]
  • In each of the above mentioned aspects of the present invention, it is desired that the driving waveform having a level A[0074] 1 and the slot width Δt is configured to have the driving energy for emitting light with the brightness corresponding to substantially 1 LSB of the brightness data.
  • The levels A[0075] 1 to An can preferably form the configurations of different potential. For example, the levels A1 to An can form the configuration corresponding to the potential with which the brightness of the light-emitting device is substantially 1:2: . . . :n. Furthermore, the levels A1 to An can form the configuration corresponding to the potential with which the level difference Am−Am−1 (where m indicates an integer equal to or larger than 1 and equal to or smaller than n, and the level A1 is a driving threshold of a light-emitting device) is substantially constant. Furthermore, the levels A1 to An can also be different current values.
  • In addition, with the driving waveform having a substantially constant level difference A[0076] m−Am−1 (where m is an integer equal to or larger than 1 and equal to or smaller than n, and A0 is a driving threshold of a light-emitting device), or Am−Am−1≧Am−1−Am−2 for m equal to or larger than 2, the level Ak indicating the maximum level including the value when k=1, the level Ak smaller than An, the level of the slot enclosed by the slots having the level Ak, and the Nk+2(k−1) reaching a predetermined largest number of slots of S (where S indicates an integer equal to or larger than 2n−1), when the driving energy is increased by one level, and when, instead of changing the level of the slot which is adjacent to the slot having the level A1 and has the level at which the light-emitting device cannot be practically driven, the number of the slots having the levels higher than the level A1 is larger than and an integer closest to (S·k+2k+1)/(k+1), the driving waveform is changed into that in the third driving method having the maximum level Ak+1, and the number of the unit driving waveform blocks defined by the level difference Am−Am−1 and the slot width Δt larger by one than the above mentioned driving waveform, the level gets smaller when the driving energy is one level increased, and the level of the slot closer to the slot one level higher gets one level larger.
  • With the configuration, the levels A[0077] 1 to An can have the brightness of the light-emitting device of substantially 1:2: . . . : in potential, and the levels A1 to An can indicate the level difference Am−Am−1 (where m is an integer equal to or larger than 1 and equal to or smaller than n) substantially constant in potential. The levels A1 to An can be configured as having the current value having the level of substantially 1:2: . . . . :n.
  • The present invention also includes the following aspects. That is, [0078]
  • a drive circuit for generating a driving waveform corresponding to brightness gray-scale data: whose level is controlled by a plurality of discontinuous levels including the minimum level corresponding to the non-zero brightness gray-scale data and one or more non-minimum levels corresponding to larger brightness gray-scale data; which generates a driving waveform signal whose pulse width is controlled by discontinuous pulse widths; and whose driving waveform has a portion controlled by the non-minimum level at the head and the end of the driving waveform. [0079]
  • The level corresponding to non-zero brightness gray-scale data refers to a level at which a level at which light can be emitted corresponding to the brightness gray-scale data other than zero by applying the driving waveform controlled for the level to a light-emitting device. [0080]
  • The present invention also includes the following aspects. That is, [0081]
  • a drive circuit for generating a driving waveform corresponding to brightness gray-scale data: whose level is controlled by a plurality of discontinuous levels including the minimum level corresponding to the non-zero brightness gray-scale data and one or more non-minimum levels corresponding to larger brightness gray-scale data; which generates a driving waveform signal whose pulse width is controlled by discontinuous pulse widths; and whose entire driving waveforms have a portion controlled by the non-minimum level at least at one of the head and the end of the driving waveform. [0082]
  • The present invention also includes the following aspects. That is, [0083]
  • a drive circuit for generating a driving waveform corresponding to brightness gray-scale data: whose level is controlled by a plurality of discontinuous levels including the minimum level corresponding to the non-zero brightness gray-scale data, non-minimum levels corresponding to larger brightness gray-scale data, and an intermediate level between the minimum level and the non-minimum level; which generates a driving waveform signal whose pulse width is controlled by discontinuous pulse widths; as whose driving waveforms having a portion controlled by the non-minimum level, a portion controlled by the minimum level is included at the head at a predetermined time width, a portion controlled by the intermediate level is included immediately after, and a portion controlled by the non-minimum level larger than the intermediate level is included immediately after the portion at a time width larger than the predetermined time width; and which generates a driving waveform having a portion controlled by the non-minimum level larger than the intermediate level at a width larger than the predetermined time width. [0084]
  • There can be two or more intermediate levels. [0085]
  • The present invention also includes the following aspects. That is, [0086]
  • a drive circuit for generating a driving waveform corresponding to brightness gray-scale data: whose level is controlled by a plurality of discontinuous levels including the minimum level corresponding to the non-zero brightness gray-scale data, non-minimum levels corresponding to larger brightness gray-scale data, and an intermediate level between the minimum level and the non-minimum level; which generates a driving waveform signal whose pulse width is controlled by discontinuous pulse widths; as whose driving waveforms having a portion controlled by the non-minimum level, a portion controlled by the minimum level is included at the end, a portion controlled by the intermediate level is included immediately before, and a portion controlled by the non-minimum level larger than the intermediate level is included before the portion controlled by the intermediate level at a time width larger than the predetermined time width; and which generates a driving waveform having a portion controlled by the non-minimum level larger than the intermediate level at a width larger than the predetermined time width. [0087]
  • The present invention also includes the following aspects. That is, [0088]
  • in a method of driving the light-emitting device by a driving waveform whose pulse width is controlled in a slot width Δt and whose level is controlled in n stages of at least A[0089] 1 to An (where n is an integer equal to or larger than 2, and 0<A1<A2< . . . <An) in each slot to emit a light-emitting device with the brightness corresponding to brightness data,
  • a series of predetermined driving waveforms obtained by one level increasing the driving energy of the driving waveform for driving the light-emitting device having a falling portion through each level from a level A[0090] k to a value smaller than the level Ak in order at least by one slot having a waveform obtained by increasing to A1 the level of the slot subsequent to the slot having the level A1 in the falling portion of the driving waveform in the preceding stage, thereafter one level increasing the energy for driving the light-emitting device with one level increasing the level of the slot before the one in which the level is one level increased in the driving waveform in the two stages before, from which a desired driving waveform is selected to drive the light-emitting device.
  • The series of driving waveforms can be, for example, from the predetermined driving waveform to the driving waveform subsequent to the predetermined driving waveform, and the driving waveform obtained by increasing to A[0091] 1 the level of the slot subsequent to the slot whose level is A1 in the falling portion of the predetermined driving waveform, and the subsequent driving waveforms obtained by one level increasing the driving energy for driving the light-emitting device on the driving waveform in the preceding stage one level increasing the level of one slot before the slot obtained by one level increasing the level on the two stages before in the driving waveform in the previous driving waveform, thereby obtaining one or more driving waveforms and the driving waveform in the previous stage in the relation for which the level is increased in the slot whose level is the level Ak.
  • Furthermore, the series of driving waveforms can be the subsequent driving waveforms having the level A[0092] k in the slot in which the level is increased for the driving waveform in the preceding stage, a series of driving waveforms having a level one level higher than the level Ak of the slot before the slot having the level Ak in the preceding stage in the above mentioned relation, or the waveform obtained by increasing the level to A1 of the slot subsequent to the slot whose level is A1 in the falling portion of the driving waveform in the slot in which the level of the driving waveform in the preceding stage is increased.
  • The aspect of the present invention includes the following aspect. That is, in a method of driving the light-emitting device by a driving waveform whose pulse width is controlled in a slot width Δt and whose level is controlled in n stages of at least A[0093] 1 to An (where n is an integer equal to or larger than 2, and 0<A1<A2< . . . <An) in each slot to emit a light-emitting device with the brightness corresponding to brightness data,
  • the driving waveform obtained by one level decreasing the energy for driving the light-emitting device from a predetermined driving waveform having a rising portion up to the level A[0094] k through each level lower than the level Ak in order at least by one slot has a waveform by changing the level Ak of the slot subsequent to the slot having the level Ak−1 in the rising portion of the driving waveform in the preceding stage into the level Ak−1, and the driving waveform obtained by one level decreasing the energy for driving the light-emitting device is obtained by selecting a desired driving waveform from a series of driving waveforms obtained by one level decreasing the level of one slot before the slot obtained by one level decreasing the level from the driving waveform in the two stages before and driving the light-emitting device.
  • The aspect of the present invention includes the following aspect. That is, [0095]
  • in a method of driving the light-emitting device by a driving waveform whose pulse width is controlled in a slot width Δt and whose level is controlled in n stages of at least A[0096] 1 to An (where n is an integer equal to or larger than 3, and 0<A1<A2< . . . <An) in each slot to emit a light-emitting device with the brightness corresponding to brightness data,
  • a plurality of driving waveform corresponding to plural pieces of brightness data have rising portions up to a predetermined level A[0097] k (where k indicates an integer equal to or larger than 3 and equal to or smaller than n), and includes a driving waveform having a rising portion up to the predetermined level Ak through each level from a level A1 to a level Ak−1 in order at least by one slot.
  • The aspect of the present invention includes the following aspect. That is, [0098]
  • in a method of driving the light-emitting device by a driving waveform whose pulse width is controlled in a slot width Δt and whose level is controlled in n stages of at least A[0099] 1 to An (where n is an integer equal to or larger than 3, and 0<A1<A2< . . . <An) in each slot to emit a light-emitting device with the brightness corresponding to brightness data, a plurality of driving waveform corresponding to plural pieces of brightness data have falling portions to a predetermined level Ak (where k indicates an integer equal to or larger than 3 and equal to or smaller than n), and includes a driving waveform having a falling portion from the predetermined level Ak through each level from a level Ak−1 to a level A1 in order at least by one slot.
  • In each of the above mentioned aspects of the present invention, the light-emitting devices are a plurality of light-emitting device forming a matrix display, and apply to each light-emitting device the driving waveform corresponding to respective brightness data. [0100]
  • The present invention also includes the following configuration as an aspect of the display device according to the present invention. [0101]
  • In a display device having a multilight-emitting device by matrix-wiring a plurality of light-emitting devices using scanning signal wiring and information signal wiring, a scanning circuit connected to the scanning signal wiring, and a modulation circuit connected to the information signal wiring, [0102]
  • the modulation circuit drives a light-emitting device selected by the scanning circuit in each of the above mentioned driving methods. [0103]
  • Practically, the scanning circuit sequentially selects each scanning signal wiring, assigns selected potential as basic potential to the selected scanning signal wiring, and assigns to a plurality of light-emitting devices connected to the selected scanning signal wiring a signal having the above mentioned driving waveforms through a plurality of information signal wiring to which the elements are connected. [0104]
  • With the configuration, it is desired that the time from starting the rise of the driving waveform to the reaching the maximum level A[0105] k can be set such that the time can be substantially equal to or larger than a time constant of 0% to 90% depending on the load of the information signal wiring of the multilight-emitting device and the driving capability of the drive circuit.
  • The time constant of 0% to 90% is used in measuring a driving waveform at a portion where the driving waveform is supplied to the wiring, and refers to the time required to reach the potential 0.9 times as high as the potential difference from the time when the potential starts changing in the portion when the driving waveform rises up to the desired potential. By raising the driving waveform in a time substantially equal to or longer than the time constant of 0% to 90%, a voltage 90% or more as high as the voltage to be applied to both ends of the electron sources can be applied, thereby obtaining the brightness of 90% or more than the desired amount of light emission. [0106]
  • With the configuration of distributing an electric current concurrently flowing through a plurality of information signal wirings, it is desired that the driving waveform to be applied to a part of the above mentioned plurality of information signal wirings is controlled such that the rise can start in the first half of the selection period, and the driving waveform to be applied to another part of the information signal wiring is controlled such that the fall can start in the second half of the selection period. In one selection period, a plurality of slots are set to control the pulse width. Practically, the driving waveform to be applied to a part of the above mentioned plurality of information signal wirings is applied such that the driving waveform can rise from the first (or close to first) slot for the pulse width control in the selection period independent of the corresponding driving energy (gray-scale), and the driving waveform to be applied to the remaining information signal wiring is applied such that the driving waveform can rise in the last (or close to the last) slot for the pulse width control in the selection period independent of the corresponding driving energy, thereby distributing the current concurrently flowing in a plurality of information signal wirings. Specifically, it is desired that the information signal wiring in which the rise timing of the driving waveform to be applied set in the first half in the selection period and the information signal wiring in which the fall timing of the driving waveform to be applied set in the second half in the selection period can be alternately arranged. At this time, it is desired that the time axis of the driving waveform can be configured opposite between a part of the plurality of information signal wiring and the remaining portions. [0107]
  • With the above mentioned configuration, the modulation circuit receives R-bit brightness data as image data, the pulse width is controlled within the range of the number of slots of 2[0108] P, and the level is controlled at the n=20 stage. It is desired to set the relation of R<P+Q for the data of R, P, and Q.
  • The present invention also includes the following aspect. That is, [0109]
  • in a display device having a multilight-emitting device by matrix-wiring a plurality of light-emitting devices using scanning signal wiring and information signal wiring, a scanning circuit connected to the scanning signal wiring, and a modulation circuit connected to the information signal wiring, [0110]
  • the modulation circuit includes a circuit for controlling a pulse width of a unit pulse of a slot width Δt in a range of 0 to 22 to display R-bit brightness data to be input as image data, and a circuit for controlling a level within a range of the first to the 2[0111] Q-th level of a level level, and the data of the R, P, and Q has the relation of R<P+Q.
  • A light-emitting device according to the present invention can be an LED, an EL, and an electron emission device. The electron emission device does not emit light itself, but can be used as a light-emitting device using an object fluorescent through emitted electrons. The electron emission device can be a cold cathode device. A field emission (FE) type electron emission device, and an MIM type electron emission device can be preferably used. Especially, a surface conduction type emission device (SCE) can be preferably used. The surface conduction type emission device can generate a number of devices with uniform electron emission characteristic, and is a desired device. [0112]
  • According to the driving method of the present invention, a combination use of pulse width control and pulse level control enables the resolution of a level of pulse level control, that is, the minimum level difference, to be set as an easily realized value. Furthermore, the resolution of the pulse width control, that is, the slot width can be larger to lower the maximum frequency of a drive signal and the maximum level. Especially, by raising or dropping the driving waveform in a stepped form, the levels of the rising or falling portions can be protected against a sudden change. Thus, for example, an unnecessary radiation can be suppressed. Furthermore, an irregular driving waveform can be reduced to prevent the deterioration of the grayscale characteristic at a low gray scale level. In addition, the occurrence of overshoot or ringing can be suppressed, and the application of an abnormal voltage to a light-emitting device can be prevented. [0113]
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
  • FIG. 1 is a block diagram of a multi-electron source drive circuit according to an embodiment of the present invention; [0114]
  • FIG. 2 is a block diagram of a modulation circuit in FIG. 1; [0115]
  • FIG. 3 is a block diagram of a PWM circuit in FIG. 2; [0116]
  • FIG. 4 is a block diagram showing an example of the principal part structure of the PWM circuit of FIG. 3; [0117]
  • FIG. 5 is a block diagram showing another example of the principal part structure of the PWM circuit of FIG. 3; [0118]
  • FIG. 6 is a circuit diagram showing an example of an output stage circuit in FIG. 2; [0119]
  • FIG. 7 is a graph showing the voltage/luminescence intensity characteristics of a light-emitting device (current equal dividing); [0120]
  • FIG. 8 is a waveform chart showing an example of V14 driving waveforms by the current equal dividing; [0121]
  • FIG. 9 is a structural diagram of an rXs matrix type image display unit; [0122]
  • FIG. 10 is a waveform chart of a driving waveform in a pulse width modulation circuit by conventional technology in the case that luminance brightness data is between zero and ¼ of the maximum luminance brightness; [0123]
  • FIG. 11 is a waveform chart of driving waveforms in a pulse width modulation circuit by a first embodiment in the case that luminance brightness data is between zero and ¼ of the maximum luminance brightness; [0124]
  • FIG. 12 is an equivalent circuit diagram of the multi-light emitting device in FIG. 1; [0125]
  • FIG. 13 is a diagram of a single bit column-directional wiring model of the equivalent circuit diagram in FIG. 12; [0126]
  • FIG. 14 is a voltage waveform chart at an end of row-directional wiring in the model in FIG. 13; [0127]
  • FIG. 15 is a current waveform chart flowing into column-directional wiring in the model in FIG. 13; [0128]
  • FIG. 16 is a voltage waveform chart at an end of row-directional wiring in the case of driving with a conventional waveform; [0129]
  • FIG. 17 is a current waveform chart flowing into column-directional wiring in the case of driving with a conventional waveform; [0130]
  • FIG. 18 is a waveform chart showing an example of V14 driving waveforms by voltage equal dividing; [0131]
  • FIG. 19 is a graph showing the voltage/luminescence intensity characteristics of a light emitting device (voltage equal dividing); [0132]
  • FIG. 20 is a graph showing linearity in V14 driving in FIGS. 8 and 18; [0133]
  • FIG. 21 is a waveform chart showing an example of Vn driving waveforms; [0134]
  • FIG. 22 is a waveform chart showing modulation waveforms and a current, which flows in arbitrary scan wiring Yq, in V14 driving (front alignment); [0135]
  • FIG. 23 is a waveform chart showing modulation waveforms and a current, which flows in arbitrary scan wiring Yq, in Vn driving (front alignment); [0136]
  • FIG. 24 is a waveform chart showing modulation waveforms and a current, which flows in arbitrary scan wiring Yq, in the case of using front and back alignment in Vn driving; [0137]
  • FIG. 25 is a waveform chart showing an example of new Vn driving waveforms; [0138]
  • FIG. 26 is a waveform chart showing an example of modulation waveforms and a current, which flows in arbitrary scan wiring Yq, in new Vn driving (front alignment); [0139]
  • FIG. 27 is a waveform chart showing modulation waveforms and a current, which flows in arbitrary scan wiring Yq, in the case of using front and back alignment in new Vn driving; [0140]
  • FIG. 28 is a schematic diagram showing an example of the device structure of a surface conductive emission device; [0141]
  • FIG. 29 is a sectional view showing an example of the device structure of an FE type device; [0142]
  • FIG. 30 is a sectional view showing an example of the device structure of an MIM type device; [0143]
  • FIG. 31 is a wiring diagram showing the electric structure of a multi-electron beam source; [0144]
  • FIG. 32 is an output waveform chart of a conventional scan circuit and a conventional pulse width modulation circuit; [0145]
  • FIG. 33 is an output waveform chart of a conventional scan circuit and a conventional pulse width modulation circuit; [0146]
  • FIG. 34 is a structural diagram of a multi-electron beam source; [0147]
  • FIG. 35 is an exploded perspective view of the multi-electron source in FIG. 34; [0148]
  • FIG. 36 is an equivalent circuit diagram at the time when all the pixels connected to a certain selection electrode light up; [0149]
  • FIG. 37 is a graph showing the voltage of each portion on a selection electrode in the circuit shown in FIG. 36; [0150]
  • FIGS. 38A, 38B and [0151] 38C are charts of driving waveforms applied to a pixel in the most distant edge in the circuit shown in FIG. 36; and
  • FIG. 39 is a waveform chart of signals TV[0152] 4 to TVl and GV4 to GV0 in FIG. 6.
  • DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
  • In one of preferable embodiments of the present invention, as for a driving waveform at the time when the number of slots whose maximum levels are A[0153] k becomes Nk (here, Nk is an integer which is one or more) from Nk−1 by increasing the drive energy of a driving waveform by one step, by letting a slot where the waveform rises to a level A1 be a first slot, let levels of first to (k−1)-th slots be A1 to Ak−1 respectively, and let levels of k-th to (Nk+k−1)-th slots be Ak, and let levels of (Nk+k)-th to (Nk+2 (k−1))-th slots be Ak−1 to A1 respectively. Levels of other slots except them are made to be values at which a device is not driven substantially. Then, against this, a driving waveform having drive energy with one more step is obtained by changing the level of a (Nk+2k−1)-th slot from the value, at which a device is not driven substantially, to A1, and it is possible to form the driving waveform obtained by increasing the above-described drive energy at a time by one step by changing the level of a (Nk+2(k−1))-th slot from A1 to A2 hereafter, and changing the level of a (Nk+k)-th slot from Ak−1 to Ak. In addition, it is also good to reverse the order of this waveform setting method.
  • In order to carry a maximum level, in the case that the above-described drive energy is increased by one more step for a driving waveform whose above-described maximum level A[0154] k is smaller than An while including the case of k=1, and in which the number of the slots whose levels are the maximum level Ak becomes three from two, the level of the (k+1)-th slot is changed to Ak+1 from Ak instead of changing the level of the above-described (Nk+2k−1)-th slot to A1 from 0.
  • Namely, the driving waveform having the drive energy, increased by one more step, for the driving waveform where the number of the slots whose levels are A[0155] k becomes three from two by increasing one more step of drive energy for the previous driving waveform is made into the geometry of changing the level of a center slot among three slots, having levels of the above-described driving waveform which are Ak, from Ak to Ak+1. In addition, it is also good to make the driving waveform, having drive energy, increased by one more step, for the driving waveform where the number of slots whose levels are Ak becomes four from three by increasing one more step of drive energy for the previous driving waveform, be in the geometry of changing the levels of slots except both ends out of the four slots, whose levels of the above-described driving waveform are Ak, to Ak+1 from Ak. Hereafter, the drive method using such a driving waveform train is called “V14 driving”.
  • Alternatively, in the case that the above-described drive energy is increased by one more step for a driving waveform whose above-described maximum level A[0156] k is smaller than An while including the case of k=1, and in which the above-described (Nk+2(k−1))-th slot reaches the maximum slot number S (here, S is an integer which is 2n−1 or more), the driving waveform is changed into a driving waveform in which pulse width is the number of slots that is equal to or more than (S·k+2k+1)/(k+1) and closest to this, whose maximum level is Ak+1, and which shows step-like leading and trailing edges where the number of the above-described unit driving waveform blocks is larger by one than that of the driving waveform instead of changing the level of the above-described (Nk+2k−1)-th slot to A1 from the level at which a device is not driven substantially. Then, if there is a plurality of slots whose levels are any values of A1 to Ak, and are the same, a level of a slot whose level is smaller and which is closer to a slot, whose level is larger by one step, is enlarged by one step when making the above-described drive energy increase by one step further henceforth.
  • Hereafter, the drive method using such a driving waveform train is called “Vn driving”. In this Vn driving, in order to maintain monotonicity at the time of carrying a maximum level, it is preferable that a level and level difference are A[0157] n−An−1≧ . . . ≧A2−A1>A1, or are almost constant, and in particular, it is preferable that An−An−1 . . . =A2−A1=A1. In addition, it is preferable that a unit driving waveform block which is determined by level difference An−An−1, . . . , or A2−A1, or level difference between a level A1 and a level which becomes a drive threshold of a device, and slot width Δt has the drive energy which makes the above-described light emitting device emit light in luminance brightness corresponding to 1 LSB of luminance brightness data (luminance brightness corresponding to the minimum gradation) respectively.
  • Another method of carrying the maximum level forms the above-described driving waveform by preferentially adding a unit driving waveform block, which is determined by level difference A[0158] n−An−1, . . . , or A2−A1, or level difference between a level A1 and a level which becomes a drive threshold of a device, and slot width Δt, to a location where the maximum level Ak including k=1 is lower and the maximum levels continue, and changes a level of an arbitrary slot among a (k+1)-th slot to a (S−k)-th slot, and preferably, a level of a leading or trailing slot in the above-described range to Ak+1 from Ak when making the above-described drive energy increase by one more step for a driving waveform where the number of slots whose leveld are the maximum level Ak is S−2(k−1) with letting the maximum number of slots be S. Hereafter, the drive method using such a driving waveform train is called “new Vn driving”.
  • EXAMPLES
  • Hereafter, examples of the present invention will be described. [0159]
  • Example 1
  • FIG. 1 is a block diagram of a multi-electron source drive circuit according to an example of the present invention. This figure shows a [0160] multi-electron source 101, a modulation circuit 102, a scan circuit 103, a timing generation circuit 104, a data conversion circuit 105, and a multi-power source circuit 106. A multi-electron source 101 is driven in this structure. As shown in FIG. 34, the multi-electron source 101 comprises an electron source (electron emission device) 1 provided in an intersection of row-directional wiring 2 and column-directional wiring 3. As an electron source, although the SCE type, FE type, and MIM type electron emission device are known as described above, in this Example, the SCE type electron emission device was used.
  • The [0161] data conversion circuit 105 converts drive data, used for driving the multi-electron source 101 from the external, into a format suitable for the modulation circuit 102. The modulation circuit 102 is connected to the column-directional wiring of the multi-electron source 101, and inputs a modulated signal into the multi-electron source 101 according to the drive data, which is given data conversion, from the data conversion circuit 105. The scan circuit 103 is connected to the row-directional wiring of the multi-electron source 101, and selects a row of the multi-electron source 101 to which an output of the modulation circuit 102 is applied. Although line sequential scanning which sequentially selects a row at a time is generally performed, it is no problem to select a plurality of rows or to select a plane, without being limited to this. The timing generation circuit 104 generates timing signals for the modulation circuit 102, scan circuit 103, and data conversion circuit 104. The multi-power source circuit 106 outputs a plurality of supply values, and controls an output value of the modulation circuit 102. Generally, although being a voltage source circuit, the multi-power source circuit 106 is not limited to this.
  • Next, the [0162] modulation circuit 102 will be described in detail with a block diagram in FIG. 2. FIG. 2 is a block diagram showing the internal structure of the modulation circuit 102. The modulation circuit 102 comprises a shift register 107, a PWM circuit 108, and an output stage circuit 109. The modulation data which is given format conversion of drive data by the data conversion circuit 105 is inputted into the shift register 107, and modulation data according to the column-directional wiring of the multi-electron source 101 is transmitted by the shift register 107. The output stage circuit 109 is connected to the multi-power source circuit 106, and outputs a driving waveform according to the present invention. The PWM circuit 108 inputs modulation data according to the column-directional wiring of the multi-electron source 101 from the shift register 107, and generates a pulse width output according to each output voltage of the output stage circuit 106. In addition, the timing signal for the control of the shift register 107 and PWM circuit 108 is inputted from the timing generation circuit 104.
  • Next, the [0163] PWM circuit 108 will be described in detail with a block diagram in FIG. 3. FIG. 3 is a block diagram showing the internal structure of the PWM circuit 108. Although the case of 4 stages of voltage output stages circuit will be described as an example here, the PWM circuit 108 is not limited to this. The PWM circuit 108 comprises a latch 110, a V1 start circuit 111, a V2 start circuit 112, a V3 start circuit 113, a V4 start circuit 114, a V1 end circuit 115, a V2 end circuit 116, a V3 end circuit 117, a V4 end circuit 118, a V1 PWM generation circuit 119, a V2 PWM generation circuit 120, a V3 PWM generation circuit 121, and a V4 PWM generation circuit 122. The latch circuit 110 latches each modulation data outputted from each shift register 107 according to a load signal outputted from the timing generation circuit 104. Here, the load signal outputted from the timing generation circuit 104 is also used as a start timing signal of each PWM signal.
  • The modulation data latched by the [0164] latch circuit 110 is further inputted into the V1 to V4 start circuits 111 to 114, and the V1 to V4 end circuits 115 to 118. Next, a start signal outputted from V1 start circuit 111 and an end signal outputted from the V1 end circuit 115 are inputted into the V1 PWM circuit 119, and a PWM output corresponding to an output voltage V1 is inputted into the output stage circuit 109. Similarly, a start signal outputted from V2 start circuit 112 and an end signal outputted from the V2 end circuit 116 are inputted into the V2 PWM circuit 120, a PWM output corresponding to an output voltage V2 is inputted into the output stage circuit 109, a start signal outputted from the V3 start circuit 113 and an end signal outputted from the V3 end circuit 117 are inputted into the V3 PWM circuit 121, a PWM output corresponding to an output voltage V3 is inputted into the output stage circuit 109, a start signal outputted from the V4 start circuit 114 and an end signal outputted from the V4 end circuit 118 are inputted into the V4 PWM circuit 122, and a PWM output corresponding to an output voltage V4 is inputted into the output stage circuit 109.
  • Here, in order to create a driving waveform according to the present invention, the start signal outputted from the [0165] V2 start circuit 112 is outputted in the timing later than the start signal outputted from the V1 start circuit 111, the start signal outputted from the V3 start circuit 113 is outputted in the timing later than the start signal outputted from the V2 start circuit 112, and the start signal outputted from V4 start circuit 114 is outputted in the timing later than the start signal outputted from the V3 start circuit 113. Furthermore, the end signal outputted from the V3 end circuit 117 is outputted in the timing later than the end signal outputted from the V4 end circuit 118, the end signal outputted from the V2 end circuit 116 is outputted in the timing later than the end signal outputted from the V3 end circuit 117, and the end signal outputted from the V1 end circuit 115 is outputted in the timing later than the end signal outputted from the V2 end circuit 116.
  • Next, the V1 to V4 start [0166] circuits 111 to 114, V4 to V1 end circuits 115 to 118, and V1 to V4 PWM circuits 119 to 122 will be described in detail. By showing a first circuit example in FIG. 4 and a second circuit example in FIG. 5, these will be described.
  • FIG. 4 shows circuit configuration for performing arrangement so that leading edges of output waveforms to a plurality of modulation signal wiring of the [0167] multi-electron source 101 may be almost aligned. Here, although only the V1 start circuit 111, V1 end circuit 115, and V1 PWM generation circuit 119 are shown, other start circuits, end circuits, and PWM generation circuits have the same configuration as the above-described circuits The V1 start circuit 111 comprises a decode circuit, an up counter, and a comparator, the V1 end circuit 115 comprises a decode circuit, an up counter, and a comparator, and the V1 PWM generation circuit 119 comprises an RS flip-flop.
  • The data which is decoded with a control signal included in modulation data in the decode circuit in the [0168] V1 start circuit 111 is outputted. When an output value of the decode circuit in the V1 start circuit 111 and an output value of the up counter in the V1 start circuit 111 coincide with each other, a V1 start signal is outputted from the comparator in the V1 start circuit 111. Since a signal wave form is determined every gradation value of modulation data, the decode circuit is set so that data corresponding to a gradation value of modulation data can be outputted. Here, since V1 which is the minimum level among levels corresponding to gradation values which are not 0 is used when a gradation value of modulation data is not zero, the decode circuit is constituted so that an output with which a start signal which specifies a start of a V1 output by comparison with an output value of the up counter is generated may be outputted when a gradation value of modulation data is not zero. In a signal wave form corresponding to a gradation value of modulation data, since it is determined every gradation value whether V2, V3, and V4 are required, the decode circuit compared with an output of the up counter also in the V2, V3, and V4 start circuits performs an outputs according to the gradation value of the modulation data. On the other hand, data which is decoded with a control signal included in modulation data in the decode circuit in the V1 end circuit 111 is outputted. Since the timing of ending a V1 output is determined by a gradation value of the modulation data, the decode circuit outputs an output according to the gradation value. The operation of the V2, V3, and V4 start circuits is the same. When an output value of the decode circuit in the V1 end circuit 111 and an output value of the up counter in the V1 end circuit 111 coincide with each other, a V1 end signal is outputted from the comparator in the V1 end circuit
  • By inputting the above start signal and end signal into the V1 [0169] PWM generation circuit 119, a PWM waveform TV 1 corresponding to the V1 output is outputted. In FIG. 4, the V1 PWM generation circuit 119 comprises an RS flip-flop. A signal which starts in the input timing of a start signal and falls in the input timing of an end signal by the start signal being inputted into a set terminal S of this RS flip prop, and the end signal being inputted into a reset terminal R is outputted from the RS flip-flop as a PWM waveform TV1 of the V1 PWM generation circuit 119. In addition, although the RS flip-flop is used as the V1 PWM generation circuit 119, a JK flip-flop or another circuit is sufficient here.
  • Next, as a second circuit example, FIG. 5 shows circuit configuration for performing arrangement so that trailing edges of output waveforms to a plurality of modulation signal wiring of the [0170] multi-electron source 101 may be almost aligned. The V1 start circuit 111 comprises a decode circuit, a down counter, and a comparator, the V1 end circuit 115 comprises a constant circuit, a down counter, and a comparator, and the V1 PWM generation circuit 119 comprises an RS flip-flop. Here, although only the V1 start circuit 111, V1 end circuit 115, and V1 PWM generation circuit 119 are shown, other start circuits, end circuits, and PWM generation circuits have the same configuration as the above-described circuits
  • The data which is decoded with a control signal included in modulation data in the decode circuit in the [0171] V1 start circuit 111 is outputted. When an output value of the decode circuit in the V1 start circuit 111 and an output value of the down counter in the V1 start circuit 111 coincide with each other, a V1 start signal is outputted from the comparator in the V1 start circuit 111. Data which is decoded with a control signal included in modulation data in the decode circuit in the V1 end circuit 111 is outputted. When an output value of the decode circuit in the V1 end circuit 111 and an output value of the down counter in the V1 end circuit 111 coincide with each other, a V1 end signal is outputted from the comparator in the V1 end circuit 111. By inputting the above start signal and end signal into the V1 PWM generation circuit 119, a PWM waveform TV 1 corresponding to the V1 output is outputted.
  • Although the circuit shown in either FIG. 4 or FIG. 5 can be used for the above-described [0172] PWM circuit 108 and the above-described output stage circuit 109 in response to each column-directional wiring of the multi-electron source 101, as a third example, it is possible to alternately perform leading alignment and trailing alignment by providing the circuit in FIG. 4 and the circuit in FIG. 5 by turns in the column-directional wiring.
  • FIG. 6 shows an example of a circuit which is used every column-directional wiring as the [0173] output stage circuit 109 shown in FIGS. 2 and 3. In the circuit in FIG. 6, potentials V1 to V4 are 0<V1<V2<V3<V4, and they are outputted corresponding to PWM output waveforms TV1 to TV4 respectively. Q1 to Q4 are transistors or paired transistors which output potentials V1 to V4 to an output terminal Out respectively by turning on. PWM output waveforms TV1 to TV4 are applied to gates GV1 to GV4 of respective transistors Q1 to Q4 through a logical circuit so that two or more transistors out of Q1 to Q4 should not turn on simultaneously even if two or more among these are in H-level, and so that only the largest potential among potentials V1 to V4 corresponding to PWM output waveforms TV1 to TV4 which are in H-level is outputted to an output terminal Out. FIG. 39 shows an example of waveforms of TV4 to TV1, and GV4 to GVO.
  • FIG. 7 shows the voltage/luminescence intensity characteristic of a light-emitting device whose voltage/luminescence intensity characteristic has nonlinear threshold characteristics like an LED or an electron emission device. A horizontal axis denotes the applied voltage, and a vertical axis denotes the luminescence intensity. The luminescence of respective regions a, b, c and d in the time series chart of luminescence becomes equivalent by setting respective drive level potentials V1, V2, V3, and V4 so that the ratio of luminescence intensity may be set at 1:2:3:4. That is, it is possible to equalize the luminescence of unit driving waveform blocks A, B, C and D which consist of unit pulse width Δt shown in the time series chart of a driving waveform, and unit levels, i.e., V4−V3, V3−V2, V2−V1, and V1−V0 by optimally setting respective drive level potentials V1, V2, V3, and V4. Here, potentials V1 to V4 are set so that the luminescence of respective unit driving waveform blocks A to D almost coincides with 1 LSB (one gradation) of luminance brightness data. [0174]
  • In addition, selection potential is given to a device via scan signal wiring as basic potential. Here, the selection potential is −9.9 V. Therefore, regardless of the influence of voltage drop, when a level of a driving signal is V1, V2, V3, or V4, a voltage applied to a device is V1−(−9.9) [V], V2−(−9.9) [V], V3−(−9.9) [V], or V4−(−9.9) [V] respectively. In addition, V0 is chosen so that V0−(−9.9) [V] may become equal to or less than a drive voltage threshold of a device. Here, V0 is made to be ground potential. In addition, this value is made to be the same as the drive threshold of a device here. Thus, the drive voltage threshold of a device is 9.9 [V]. [0175]
  • FIG. 8 shows a V14 driving waveform as an example of the geometry of a driving waveform for expressing gradations. In FIG. 8, a signal of each gradation consists of the number of unit driving waveform blocks according to the number of gradations. One gradation consists of one unit driving waveform block, two gradations do two unit driving waveform blocks, and N gradations do N unit driving waveform blocks. In the figure, a reverse unit driving waveform block in an N-th gradation denotes differential from a (N−1)-th gradation. A driving waveform in the N-th gradation is formed by adding a unit drive block to the location, where a driving waveform continues, in the driving waveform in the (N−1)-th gradation. When a driving waveform is formed in this manner, it is possible to guarantee monotonicity even if voltage/luminescence intensity characteristics are changed, or even if there is dispersion between light emitting devices. [0176]
  • In this Example, the pulse width control of a unit pulse with slot width Δt is performed in a zero to 259 range by using P=9 bits so as to display image data with the data bit length of R=10, and level (amplitude) control is performed in a range of peak levels of 1 to 4 levels, i.e., a range of levels V1 to V4 by using Q=2 bits including a remaining 1 bit. That is, in order to display 10-bit image data, respective above-described data R, P, and Q have the relation of R<P+Q. [0177]
  • If, for example, 2 bits in high order are used for level control and pulse width is controlled by the remaining 8 bits in the case of R=P+Q, it is not possible to express all the 10-bit picture data when a trailing edge of a driving waveform is made to be step-like. Thus, the number of gradations falls. However, in this Example, since pulse width is controlled in 9 bits so as to become R<P+Q, thereby, all the 10-bit picture data can be expressed. [0178]
  • As shown in FIG. 8, by outputting all the levels of one level (potential V1) to k level (potential Vk) of driving waveforms in turns from a low level to a high level at the time of the startup of the driving waveform in the case that the highest drive level in the N-th gradation is k, and maintaining the output of each level for unit pulse width Δt or more, it becomes possible to reduce a current which flows at the time of the startup of the driving waveform. [0179]
  • Similarly, by outputting all the levels of k level potential (potential Vk) to one level potential (potential V1) of driving waveforms in turns from a high level to a low level at the time of the fall of the driving waveform, and maintaining the output of each level for unit pulse width Δt or more, it becomes possible to reduce a current which flows at the time of the fall of the driving waveform. [0180]
  • FIG. 12 is an equivalent circuit diagram of a multi-light emitting device. In actual driving, although selection potential is applied to the row-[0181] directional wiring 2 to be selected and drive potential is applied to the column-directional wiring 3, a model was simplified for intuitive understanding, and simulation was performed by using a single-bit column-directional wiring model shown in FIG. 13. Parasitic resistance was 10 Ω, parasitic inductance was 300 nH, parasitic capacitance was 10 pF, and a modulation circuit was formed by four kinds of power supplies, and MOS transistors.
  • In the circuit in FIG. 13, the simulation was performed in the case that a driving waveform with nine gradations in FIG. 8 was generated on conditions that V0=0 V, V1=3 V, V2=3.7 V, V3=4.4 V, and V4=5.0 V. FIG. 14 shows a voltage waveform in an end of the row-directional wiring, and FIG. 15 shows a waveform of a current which flows into the column-directional wiring. [0182]
  • For comparison, FIG. 16 shows a voltage waveform in an end of the row-directional wiring in the case that a driving waveform was generated on conditions that V0=0 V and V1=V2=V3=V4=5.0 V, that is, in the case of driving by a conventional waveform, and FIG. 17 shows a waveform of a current which flows into the column-directional wiring. [0183]
  • When driving is performed by the driving waveform of this Example (FIG. 8), it can be seen that the current which flows into the column-directional wiring is fallen in half in comparison with the driving by the conventional waveform. In consequence, although the driving by the conventional waveform generates an overshoot voltage of about 2 V, the driving by the driving waveform of this Example makes an overshoot voltage fall at about 0.8 V. [0184]
  • Thus, according to this Example, it becomes possible to provide a driving waveform and a drive method that make it possible in a low-cost drive circuit to realize fine gradation, to reserve the monotonicity of gradation, to realize the uniform luminescence of a light emitting device, to reduce radiated noise, and to stabilize a driving waveform. [0185]
  • Example 2
  • FIG. 18 shows another example of V14 waveforms. Driving waveforms in FIG. 7 show an example in the case of setting respective drive level potentials V1, V2, V3, and V4 so that a ratio of luminescence intensity might be set to 1:2:3:4. In an LED or an electron emission device, since luminescence intensity is proportional to a drive current in general, hereafter, this is called a current equal dividing method. On the other hand, FIG. 19 shows the case that it is determined to make a ratio of V1, V2, V3, and V4 be 1:2:3:4, i.e., to make potential differences V4−V3, V3−V2, V2−V1, and V1−V0 (reference potential V0 of a driving waveform was made the same as a drive threshold of a device also here) fixed, and hereafter, this is called a voltage equal dividing method. FIG. 19 shows the voltage/current (luminescence intensity) in the voltage equal dividing method. [0186]
  • In FIG. 18, a reverse unit driving waveform block in an N-th gradation denotes differential from a (N−1)-th gradation. A driving waveform in the N-th gradation is formed by adding a unit drive block to the location, where a driving waveform continues, in the driving waveform in the (N−1)-th gradation. Luminescence a to d of unit drive blocks A to D in FIG. 19 which are used in FIG. 18 have the relation of a<b<c<d. Therefore, although, in the waveform in FIG. 8 where the luminescence of unit drive blocks A to D is fixed, the difference between a third gradation and a fourth gradation is the unit drive block B, in the waveform in FIG. 18, a change between a third gradation and a fourth gradation, which are low gradations, is made small as the unit drive block A. [0187]
  • FIG. 20 shows linearity in the V14 driving. When a driving waveform is formed in this manner, it is possible to guarantee monotonicity even if voltage and luminescence intensity characteristics are changed, or even if there is dispersion between light emitting devices. [0188]
  • As shown in FIG. 18, by outputting all the levels of one level (potential V1) to k level (potential Vk) of driving waveforms in turns from a low level to a high level at the time of the startup of the driving waveform in the case that the highest drive level in the N-th gradation is k, and maintaining the output of each level for unit pulse width Δt or more, it becomes possible to reduce a current which flows at the time of the startup of the driving waveform. [0189]
  • Similarly, by outputting all the levels of k level potential (potential Vk) to one level potential (potential V1) of driving waveforms in turns from a high level to a low level at the time of the fall of the driving waveform, and maintaining the output of each level for unit pulse width Δt or more, it becomes possible to reduce a current which flows at the time of the fall of the driving waveform. [0190]
  • Example 3
  • FIG. 21 shows an example of Vn driving waveforms. This waveform is for performing driving with a waveform where a level of a driving waveform of data N is made to be k (k is an integer that is one or more, and less than n) when luminance brightness data consists of R bits and luminance brightness data is approximately 0<N<(2[0191] R) (k/n−1). In the driving waveform in FIG. 8, if the number of unit drive blocks (the number of slots) of the level k of the driving waveform in an (n−1)-th gradation becomes 3 by adding a unit drive block to a driving waveform in an (n−2)-th gradation when a level k is three or less, a unit drive block with a level of k+1 is added to a driving waveform in the following n-th gradation. However, in driving waveforms in FIG. 21, a level (level) is not carried until the number of unit drive blocks with a level of 1 (level 1; the minimum level) reaches a predetermined maximum number S (in this Example, 259) when increasing gradation, but when the number reaches the maximum number S and gradation is increased by one step next, carrying is performed by turning back so that the number of unit drive blocks in level 1 may become a number that is (S·k+2k+1)/(k+1) or more and may be the nearest to this, and the number of blocks in the one upper level may become smaller by two or three than that in a lower level.
  • For example, in the case of S=259, when the number of unit drive blocks in [0192] level 1 in a 259th gradation becomes full, i.e., 259, in the following 260th gradation, the number of blocks in level 1 becomes 131 and that in level 2 does 129. Similarly, when the number of unit drive blocks in level 1 is 259 and that in level 2 is 257 in a 516th gradation, and hence, the number of unit drive blocks in level 1 becomes full, the number of blocks in level 1 becomes 175, that in level 2 does 172, and that in level 3 does 170 in the following 517th gradation. In addition, when the number of blocks in level 1 is 259, that in level 2 is 257, that n level 3 is 255, and hence, the number of unit drive blocks in level 1 becomes full in a 771st gradation, the number of blocks in level 1 becomes 196, that in level 2 does 194, that in level 3 does 192, that in level 4 does 190 in the following 772-th gradation, and hence, maximum levels are carried by one respectively.
  • According to driving waveforms in FIG. 21, in the case of n=4 and k=1, i.e., luminance brightness data being between zero and ¼ of the maximum luminance brightness, a current per one light emitting device becomes ¼ and a current which flows into the selected row-directional wiring also becomes r·i/4 by making an effective portion of amplitude of a pulse width modulation waveform be one fourth of a conventional pulse width modulation waveform, and making pulse width be four times. Hence, it also becomes possible to reduce the amount of a voltage drop to one fourth, and to reduce the reduced amount of a voltage, applied to a light-emitting device, to one fourths. Similarly, when n=4 and k=2, i.e., luminance brightness data is between zero and ½ of the maximum luminance brightness, it becomes possible to reduce the amount of a voltage drop to one half, and when n=4 and k=3, i.e., luminance brightness data is between zero and ¾ of the maximum luminance brightness, it becomes possible to reduce the amount of a voltage drop to three fourths. [0193]
  • FIG. 9 shows an rXs matrix type image display unit. FIG. 10 is a waveform chart of driving waveforms in a pulse width modulation circuit by conventional technology in the case that n=4 and k=1, i.e., luminance brightness data is between zero and ¼ of the maximum luminance brightness. Let a current per one light-emitting device be i. It can be seen that a voltage drop arises by a current which flows into the selected row-directional wiring Yq and is r·i, and a voltage applied to a light emitting device decreases. [0194]
  • FIG. 11 is a waveform chart of driving waveforms in a pulse width modulation circuit according to this Example in the case that n=4 and k=1, i.e., luminance brightness data is between zero and ¼ of the maximum luminance brightness. FIG. 11 shows a situation of performing driving by making an effective portion of amplitude of a pulse width modulation waveform (a portion obtained by subtracting a portion, included in a drive voltage threshold of a device from amplitude; in this Example, since V0 which becomes the reference potential of a modulation waveform is made to be the same value as a drive threshold of a device, a portion obtained by subtracting a portion, included in a drive voltage threshold of a device, from amplitude =amplitude of a modulation waveform) be one fourths, and by making pulse width be 4 times. A current per one light-emitting device becomes i/4, and a current flowing into the selected row-directional wiring also becomes r·i/4. Hence, it also becomes possible to reduce the amount of a voltage drop to one fourth, and to reduce the reduced amount of a voltage, applied to a light-emitting device, to one fourths. [0195]
  • Similarly, when n=4 and k=2, i.e., luminance brightness data is between zero and ½ of the maximum luminance brightness, it becomes possible to reduce the amount of a voltage drop to one half, and when n=4 and k=3, i.e., luminance brightness data is between zero and ¾ of the maximum luminance brightness, it becomes possible to reduce the amount of a voltage drop to three fourths. [0196]
  • FIG. 22 shows an example of modulation waveforms and a current, which flows in arbitrary scan wiring Yq, in V14 driving (front alignment) according to a first or a second Example. FIG. 23 shows an example of modulation waveforms and a current, which flows in arbitrary scan wiring Yq, in Vn driving (front alignment) according to this Example. It can be seen that a peak of a current flowing into scan wiring in the Vn driving according to this Example is sharply reduced by equalizing the current. [0197]
  • FIG. 24 shows a current, which flows in arbitrary scan wiring (row-directional wiring) Yq, in the case of using front and back alignment in Vn driving. Furthermore, the current is equalized. Here, front alignment means to perform control so that a leading edge of a driving waveform becomes a first half in one selection period, and it is preferable to generate a first unit drive block in a predetermined slot in the first half of pulse width control. In addition, back alignment means to perform control so that a trailing edge of a driving waveform becomes a second half in one selection period, and it is preferable to generate a last unit drive block in a predetermined slot in the second half of pulse width control. In addition, when these predetermined slots are fixed, it is preferable to set a first slot in one selection period as a predetermined slot in the first half, and to set a last slot as a predetermined slot in the second half, but it is also good to set inner slots. Moreover, it is also good to set respective predetermined slots in the first half or second half according to the gradation or modulation waveform of a light emitting device to be driven through the column-directional wiring or other column-directional wiring every column-directional wiring. Alternatively, it is also good to set the same slot to all the column-directional wiring that drives them as respective predetermined slots in the first half or the second half according to the gradation or modulation waveform of a plurality of light emitting devices selected simultaneously. [0198]
  • Example 4
  • FIG. 25 shows driving waveforms in new Vn driving. In the case that gradation is increased, these driving waveforms are arranged in good order such that unit drive blocks with a level of 1 (level 1) are first arranged until they reach the predetermined maximum number S (in this Example, 259), next, unit drive blocks in level 2 (potential V2) are arranged until they reach a (S−1)-th slot from a second slot, −−, and unit drive blocks in level k (potential Vk) are arranged until they reach a (S+1−k)-th slot from a k-th slot. [0199]
  • FIG. 26 shows an example of modulation waveforms and a current, which flows in arbitrary scan wiring Yq, in new Vn driving (front alignment). The current is equalized. Furthermore, by using front and back alignment in the new Vn driving, it becomes possible to make a current, which flows into the scan wiring Yq, almost uniform as shown in FIG. 27 within a 1H period. [0200]
  • Here, in regard to a matrix panel which has information wiring of 1920×3, and scan wiring of 1024, the reduction effect of a current flowing into the information wiring will be computed. Let the maximum current flowing in a device be 0.8 mA. When a modulation waveform is set so that a drive current may be equally divided as shown in FIG. 7, since the maximum of a current change per device is 0.8 mA in conventional simple PWM or V14 driving, the maximum of a current change per one scan wiring, ΔIy is as follows: [0201]
  • ΔIy=0.8 mA×1920×3=4.608 A [0202]
  • Since the maximum becomes one half by using front and back alignment together, [0203]
  • ΔIy=[0204] 2.304 A
  • Since a change of a current is 0.8 mA/4=0.2 mA in the portion except leading and trailing edges of a waveform in the new Vn driving, [0205]
  • ΔIy=0.2 mA×1920×3=1.152 A [0206]
  • Furthermore, since front alignment and back alignment are repeated every device by using the front and back alignment together, the maximum of a current change becomes one half as follows: [0207]
  • ΔIy=576 mA. [0208]
  • Modified Examples of Examples
  • In the Vn driving in FIG. 21, and the new Vn driving in FIG. 25, it is possible to set a modulation waveform such that a drive current may be equally divided as shown in FIG. 7, or to set it such that an effective portion of amplitude of drive potential may be equally divided as shown in FIG. 19. In order to prevent ringing and an overshoot which are generated at the time of startup and fall of a waveform, it is effective to make voltages between potential (VO) whose potential difference from basic potential serves as a drive voltage threshold of a device, V1, V2, V3, and V4 equal. FIG. 19 shows the relation between the applied voltage and the luminescence in the case of equally dividing an effective portion of amplitude of drive potential. It can be seen that the luminescence of unit driving waveform blocks A, B, C and D which consist of unit pulse width and unit levels which are shown in a time series chart of a driving waveform does not become equal. [0209]
  • FIG. 20 shows the relation between the luminance brightness and the data in the cases of current equal dividing and voltage equal dividing in the V14 driving. Although linearity is spoiled a little in a low luminance brightness region, monotonicity is guaranteed and this can be treated by data correction etc. [0210]
  • As for γ correction, the relation between the luminance brightness data and the luminance brightness becomes a curve deeper than the 2.2nd power of reverse γ characteristics (resolution of luminance brightness becomes high in a low luminance brightness region), usually used, by setting the voltage equal dividing of V1 to V4 which can minimize ringing generation. In consequence, it becomes possible to enhance the resolution of luminance brightness in low to middle luminance brightness at the time of reverse γ conversion. [0211]
  • Although four levels of level control are performed and the number of gradations are 1024 that is from 0 to 1023 in the Examples described above, there is no limitation of a control level and the number of gradations in the present invention. [0212]
  • According to the present invention, it becomes possible to provide a driving waveform and a drive method that make it possible in a low-cost drive circuit to realize fine gradation, to reserve the monotonicity of gradation, to realize the uniform luminescence of a light emitting device, to reduce radiated noise, and to stabilize a driving waveform. In addition, it becomes possible to provide a light emitting device control method which can reduce the bias of luminance brightness distribution in an inexpensive drive circuit. [0213]

Claims (41)

What is claimed is:
1. A drive circuit for driving a light-emitting device to emit the light-emitting device with brightness corresponding to brightness data, wherein the drive circuit drives the light-emitting device by the driving waveform whose pulse width is controlled in a unit of slot width Δt and whose level in each slot is controlled at least in n stages of A1 to An (where n is an integer equal to or larger than 2, and 0<A1<A2< . . . <An), and all driving waveforms having a rising portion up to a predetermined level Ak (where k is an integer equal to or larger than 2 and equal to and smaller than n) rise up to the predetermined level Ak through each level in order at least by one slot from a level A1 to a level Ak−1.
2. A drive circuit for driving a light-emitting device to emit the light-emitting device with brightness corresponding to brightness data, wherein the drive circuit drives the light-emitting device by the driving waveform whose pulse width is controlled in a unit of slot width Δt and whose level in each slot is controlled at least in the stages of A1 to An (where n is an integer equal to or larger than 2, and 0<A1<A2< . . . <An) In the circuit, all driving waveforms having a falling portion from a predetermined level Ak (where k is an integer equal to or larger than 2 and equal to and smaller than n) falls from the predetermined level Ak through each level from a level Ak−1 to a level A1 in order at least by one slot.
3. A drive circuit for driving a light-emitting device to emit the light-emitting device with brightness corresponding to brightness data, wherein the drive circuit drives the light-emitting device by the driving waveform whose pulse width is controlled in a unit of slot width Δt and whose level in each slot is controlled at least in n stages of A1 to An (where n is an integer equal to or larger than 2, and 0<A1<A2< . . . <An). In the circuit, the driving waveform has: a rising portion up to a predetermined level Ak (where k indicates an integer equal to or larger than 2 and equal to or smaller than n) through each level from a level A1 to a level Ak−1 in order at least by one slot; and a falling portion from the level Ak through each level from the level Ak−1 to the level A1 in order at least by one slot.
4. The drive circuit according to claim 3, wherein
a driving waveform can be preferably set by setting as follows the relationship between a first driving waveform and a second driving waveform obtained by increasing/decreasing the driving energy of the first driving waveform driving a light-emitting device, that is, when the slot in which the driving waveform rises up to the level A1 is defined as a first slot, the levels of the first to a (k−1)th slot are respectively A1 to Ak−1, the level of a k-th slot and a (Nk+k−1)th slot is Ak, and the levels of an (Nk+k)th to an (Nk+2(k−1))th slots are level Ak−1 to level A1, based on which another driving waveform is obtained by one level increasing driving energy for driving the light-emitting device into the level A1 for the (Nk+2k−1)th slot, thereafter one level increasing the driving energy by increasing the level from A1 to A2 in the Nk+2(k−1)th slot, and increasing the driving energy by increasing the level from Ak−1 to Ak in the (Nk+k)th slot.
5. The drive circuit according to claim 3, wherein
the driving waveform obtained by one level increasing the driving energy of the driving waveform for driving the light-emitting device having a falling portion to a level at which the light-emitting device cannot be practically driven through each level from a level Ak to a value smaller than the level Ak in order by one slot has a waveform obtained by increasing to A1 the level of the slot subsequent to the slot having the level A1 in the falling portion of the driving waveform in the preceding stage, thereafter one level increasing the energy for driving the light-emitting device with one level increasing the level of the slot before the one in which the level is one level increased in the driving waveform in the two stages before.
6. The drive circuit according to claim 5, wherein
the relationship in which the driving waveform obtained by one level increasing the energy for driving the light-emitting device of the preceding driving waveform has the waveform obtained by one level increasing the level of the slot before the one in which the level is one level increased over the driving waveform of the two stages before can preferably apply the configuration in which the driving waveform depending on the relationship is satisfied by a series of driving waveforms up to the driving waveform whose level of the slot in which the level is increased from the driving waveform in the preceding stage and has a level one level higher than the level Ak.
7. The drive circuit according to claim 5, wherein
the relationship in which the driving waveform obtained by one level increasing the energy for driving the light-emitting device of the preceding driving waveform has the waveform obtained by one level increasing the level of the slot before the one in which the level is one level increased over the driving waveform of the two stages before can preferably apply the configuration in which the driving waveform depending on the relationship is satisfied by a series of driving waveforms up to the driving waveform whose level of the slot in which the level is increased from the driving waveform in the preceding stage and has a level one level higher than the level Ak.
8. The drive circuit according to claim 3, wherein
when the slot in which the driving waveform rises up to the level A1 is defined as a first slot, the levels of the first to a (k−1)th slot are respectively A1 to Ak−1, the level of a k-th slot and a (Nk+k−1)th slot is Ak, and the levels of an (Nk+k)th to an (Nk+2(k−1))th slots are level Ak−1 to level A1, based on which another driving waveform is obtained by one level decreasing driving energy for driving the light-emitting device from Ak to Ak−1 for the k-th slot, thereafter one level decreasing the driving energy by increasing the level from Ak−1 to Ak−2 in the (k−1)th slot, and increasing the driving energy by increasing the level from A1 to the level at which the light-emitting device cannot be practically driven in the first slot.
9. The drive circuit according to claim 3, wherein
a driving waveform having a rising portion up to a level Ak in order at least by one slot from each level lower than the level Ak can be obtained by a driving waveform having one level decreased energy for driving the light-emitting device as having a waveform indicating the level Ak−1 of the slot which is subsequent to the slot having the level Ak−1 in the rising portion in the preceding driving waveform and whose level is Ak, and the driving waveform having one level decreased energy for driving the light-emitting device has a one level decreased waveform from the level of the slot before the one from which the level of the driving waveform is one level decreased.
10. The drive circuit according to claim 3, wherein
in the driving waveform, the level in the slot between two slots having the level Ak is also Ak.
11. The drive circuit according to claim 4, wherein
in the driving waveform including two slots having the level Ak and including between the two slots other slots having the level Ak, with the level Ak including the case in which k=1, and smaller than An, and the having two or three slots having the level Ak by one level increasing the driving energy, the driving waveform having one level further increased driving energy has the level of the central slot in the three slots having the level Ak+1 changed from Ak.
12. The drive circuit according to claim 3, wherein
it is also desired that the driving waveform obtained by increasing the driving energy for driving the light-emitting device more than a predetermined driving waveform increases the pulse width rather than raise the maximum level.
13. The drive circuit according to claim 3, wherein
the driving waveform obtained when the maximum level of the driving waveform is set high by one level increasing the driving energy for driving the light-emitting device is configured such that the maximum level can continue as much as possible by increasing by one the number of unit driving waveform blocks defined by the level difference An−An−1, . . . , or A2−A1 or the level difference between the level A1 and the level which is the driving threshold of the light-emitting device, and the slot width Δt.
14. The drive circuit according to claim 3, wherein
the driving waveform obtained by increasing the driving energy for driving the light-emitting device on a predetermined driving waveform is configured by adding unit driving waveform blocks defined by the level difference An−An−1, . . . , or A2−A1 or the level difference between the level A1 and the level which is the driving threshold of the light-emitting device, and the slot width Δt by priority in the position where the maximum level Ak including k=1 can be lower.
15. The drive circuit according to claim 14, wherein
the driving waveform obtained by increasing the driving energy for driving the light-emitting device on a predetermined driving waveform is configured by adding unit driving waveform blocks defined by the level difference An−An−1, . . . , or A2−A1 or the level difference between the level A1 and the level which is the driving threshold of the light-emitting device, and the slot width Δt by priority in the position where the maximum level Ak including k=1 can be lower, and the maximum level can continue the longer.
16. The drive circuit according to claim 3, wherein
the driving waveform having a level Ak and the slot width Δt is configured to have the driving energy for emitting light with the brightness corresponding to substantially 1 LSB of the brightness data.
17. The drive circuit according to claim 4, wherein
with the driving waveform having a substantially constant level difference Am−Am−1 (where m is an integer equal to or larger than 1 and equal to or smaller than n, and A0 is a driving threshold of a light-emitting device), or Am−Am−1≧Am−1−Am−2 for m equal to or larger than 2, the level Ak indicating the maximum level including the value when k=1, the level Ak smaller than An, the level of the slot enclosed by the slots having the level Ak, and the Nk+2(k−1) reaching a predetermined largest number of slots of S (where S indicates an integer equal to or larger than 2n−1), when the driving energy is increased by one level, and when, instead of changing the level of the slot which is adjacent to the slot having the level A1 and has the level at which the light-emitting device cannot be practically driven, the number of the slots having the levels higher than the level A1 is larger than and an integer closest to (S·k+2k+1)/(k+1), the driving waveform is changed into that in the third driving method having the maximum level Ak+1, and the number of the unit driving waveform blocks defined by the level difference Am−Am−1 and the slot width Δt larger by one than the above mentioned driving waveform, the level gets smaller when the driving energy is one level increased, and the level of the slot closer to the slot one level higher gets one level larger.
18. A drive circuit for generating a driving waveform corresponding to brightness gray-scale data, wherein:
a level is controlled by a plurality of discontinuous levels including the minimum level corresponding to the non-zero brightness gray-scale data and one or more non-minimum levels corresponding to larger brightness gray-scale data, and a driving waveform signal whose pulse width is controlled by discontinuous pulse widths is generated; and
a driving waveform has a portion controlled by the non-minimum level at the head and the end of the driving waveform.
19. A drive circuit for generating a driving waveform corresponding to brightness gray-scale data, wherein:
a level is controlled by a plurality of discontinuous levels including the minimum level corresponding to the non-zero brightness gray-scale data and one or more non-minimum levels corresponding to larger brightness gray-scale data, and a driving waveform signal whose pulse width is controlled by discontinuous pulse widths is generated; and
entire driving waveforms have a portion controlled by the non-minimum level at least at one of the head and the end of the driving waveform.
20. A drive circuit for generating a driving waveform corresponding to brightness gray-scale data, wherein
a level is controlled by a plurality of discontinuous levels including the minimum level corresponding to the non-zero brightness gray-scale data, non-minimum levels corresponding to larger brightness gray-scale data, and an intermediate level between the minimum level and the non-minimum level; a driving waveform signal whose pulse width is controlled by discontinuous pulse widths is generated; as a driving waveforms having a portion controlled by the non-minimum level, a portion controlled by the minimum level is included at the head at a predetermined time width, a portion controlled by the intermediate level is included immediately after, and a portion controlled by the non-minimum level larger than the intermediate level is included immediately after the portion at a time width larger than the predetermined time width; and a driving waveform having a portion controlled by the non-minimum level larger than the intermediate level at a width larger than the predetermined time width is generated.
21. A drive circuit for generating a driving waveform corresponding to brightness gray-scale data, wherein
a level is controlled by a plurality of discontinuous levels including the minimum level corresponding to the non-zero brightness gray-scale data, non-minimum levels corresponding to larger brightness gray-scale data, and an intermediate level between the minimum level and the non-minimum level; a driving waveform signal whose pulse width is controlled by discontinuous pulse widths is generated; as a driving waveforms having a portion controlled by the non-minimum level, a portion controlled by the minimum level is included at the end, a portion controlled by the intermediate level is included immediately before, and a portion controlled by the non-minimum level larger than the intermediate level is included before the portion controlled by the intermediate level at a time width larger than the predetermined time width; and a driving waveform having a portion controlled by the non-minimum level larger than the intermediate level at a width larger than the predetermined time width is generated.
22. The drive circuit according to claim 3, wherein
the driving waveform corresponding to respective brightness data is applied to the plurality of light-emitting devices forming a matrix display.
23. A display device, comprising
a multilight-emitting device by matrix-wiring a plurality of light-emitting devices using scanning signal wiring and information signal wiring; and the drive circuit according to claim 3, wherein
the drive circuit generates a driving waveform for driving the plurality of light-emitting devices.
24. The display device according to claim 23, further comprising
a scanning circuit connected to the scanning signal wiring, wherein
the driving waveform is provided for the light-emitting device selected by the scanning circuit through the information signal wiring.
25. The display device according to claim 23, wherein
the time from starting the rise of the driving waveform to the reaching the maximum level Ak can be set such that the time can be substantially equal to or larger than a time constant of 0% to 90% depending on the load of the information signal wiring of the multilight-emitting device and the driving capability of the drive circuit.
26. The display device according to claim 23, wherein
the driving waveform to be applied to a part of the above mentioned plurality of information signal wirings is controlled such that the rise can start in the first half of the selection period during which the scanning circuit selects one scanning signal wiring, and the driving waveform to be applied to another part of the information signal wiring is controlled such that the fall can start in the second half of the selection period.
27. The display device according to claim 23, wherein
the time axis of the driving waveform can be configured opposite between a part of the plurality of information signal wiring and the remaining portions.
28. The display device according to claim 23, wherein
a modulation circuit forming the drive circuit receives R-bit brightness data as image data, the pulse width is controlled within the range of the number of slots of 2P, and the level is controlled at the n=20 stage. It is desired to set the relation of R<P+Q for the data of R, P, and Q.
29. A display device having a multilight-emitting device by matrix-wiring a plurality of light-emitting devices using scanning signal wiring and information signal wiring, a scanning circuit connected to the scanning signal wiring, and a modulation circuit connected to the information signal wiring, wherein
the modulation circuit includes a circuit for controlling a pulse width of a unit pulse of a slot width Δt in a range of 0 to 2P to display R-bit brightness data to be input as image data, and a circuit for controlling a level within a range of the first to the 2Q-th level of a level level, and the data of the R, P, and Q has the relation of R<P+Q.
30. The display device according to claim 23, wherein
the light-emitting device comprises a surface conduction type emission device.
31. A method of driving a light-emitting device by a driving waveform whose pulse width is controlled in a slot width Δt and whose level is controlled in n stages of at least A1 to An (where n is an integer equal to or larger than 2, and 0<A1<A2< . . . <An) in each slot to emit a light-emitting device with the brightness corresponding to brightness data, wherein
a series of predetermined driving waveforms obtained by one level increasing the driving energy of the driving waveform for driving the light-emitting device having a falling portion through each level from a level Ak to a value smaller than the level Ak in order at least by one slot having a waveform obtained by increasing to A1 the level of the slot subsequent to the slot having the level A1 in the falling portion of the driving waveform in the preceding stage, thereafter one level increasing the energy for driving the light-emitting device with one level increasing the level of the slot before the one in which the level is one level increased in the driving waveform in the two stages before, from which a desired driving waveform is selected to drive the light-emitting device.
32. The driving method according to claim 31, wherein
the series of driving waveforms can be, for example, from the predetermined driving waveform to the driving waveform subsequent to the predetermined driving waveform, and the driving waveform obtained by increasing to A1 the level of the slot subsequent to the slot whose level is A1 in the falling portion of the predetermined driving waveform, and the subsequent driving waveforms obtained by one level increasing the driving energy for driving the light-emitting device on the driving waveform in the preceding stage one level increasing the level of one slot before the slot obtained by one level increasing the level on the two stages before in the driving waveform in the previous driving waveform, thereby obtaining one or more driving waveforms and the driving waveform in the previous stage in the relation for which the level is increased in the slot whose level is the level Ak.
33. The driving method according to claim 32, wherein
the series of driving waveforms can be the subsequent driving waveforms having the level Ak in the slot in which the level is increased for the driving waveform in the preceding stage, a series of driving waveforms having a level one level higher than the level Ak of the slot before the slot having the level Ak in the preceding stage in the above mentioned relation.
34. The driving method according to claim 32, wherein
in a driving waveform at the subsequent stage of the series of driving waveforms, the waveform obtained by increasing the level to A1 of the slot subsequent to the slot whose level is A1 in the falling portion of the driving waveform in the slot in which the level of the driving waveform in the preceding stage is increased.
35. A method of driving a light-emitting device by a driving waveform whose pulse width is controlled in a slot width Δt and whose level is controlled in n stages of at least A1 to An (where n is an integer equal to or larger than 2, and 0<A1<A2< . . . <An) in each slot to emit a light-emitting device with the brightness corresponding to brightness data, wherein the driving waveform obtained by one level decreasing the energy for driving the light-emitting device from a predetermined driving waveform having a rising portion up to the level Ak through each level lower than the level Ak in order at least by one slot has a waveform by changing the level Ak of the slot subsequent to the slot having the level Ak−1 in the rising portion of the driving waveform in the preceding stage into the level Ak−1, and the driving waveform obtained by one level decreasing the energy for driving the light-emitting device is obtained by selecting a desired driving waveform from a series of driving waveforms obtained by one level decreasing the level of one slot before the slot obtained by one level decreasing the level from the driving waveform in the two stages before and driving the light-emitting device.
36. A method of driving a light-emitting device by a driving waveform whose pulse width is controlled in a slot width Δt and whose level is controlled in n stages of at least A1 to An (where n is an integer equal to or larger than 3, and 0<A1<A2< . . . <An) in each slot to emit a light-emitting device with the brightness corresponding to brightness data, wherein
a plurality of driving waveform corresponding to plural pieces of brightness data have rising portions up to a predetermined level Ak (where k indicates an integer equal to or larger than 3 and equal to or smaller than n), and includes a driving waveform having a rising portion up to the predetermined level Ak through each level from a level A1 to a level Ak−1 in order at least by one slot.
37. A method of driving a light-emitting device by a driving waveform whose pulse width is controlled in a slot width Δt and whose level is controlled in n stages of at least A1 to An (where n is an integer equal to or larger than 3, and 0<A1<A2< . . . <An) in each slot to emit a light-emitting device with the brightness corresponding to brightness data, wherein
a plurality of driving waveform corresponding to plural pieces of brightness data have falling portions to a predetermined level Ak (where k indicates an integer equal to or larger than 3 and equal to or smaller than n), and includes a driving waveform having a falling portion from the predetermined level Ak through each level from a level Ak−1 to a level A1 in order at least by one slot.
38. The driving method according to claim 37, wherein
the driving waveform obtained when the maximum level of the driving waveform is set high by one level increasing the driving energy for driving the light-emitting device is configured such that the maximum level can be obtained in two slots by increasing by one the number of unit driving waveform blocks defined by the level difference An−An−1, . . . or A2−A1 or the level difference between the level A1 and the level which is the driving threshold of the light-emitting device, and the slot width Δt.
39. The driving method according to claim 37, wherein
the driving waveform obtained when the maximum level of the driving waveform is set high by one level increasing the driving energy for driving the light-emitting device is configured such that the maximum level can continue in two slots or more by increasing by one the number of unit driving waveform blocks defined by the level difference An−An−1, . . . , or A2−A1 or the level difference between the level A1 and the level which is the driving threshold of the light-emitting device, and the slot width Δt.
40. The drive circuit according to claim 15, wherein
in the driving waveform whose maximum level Δk which is the number of slots i is S−2(k−1) with the largest number of slots defined as S, the driving waveform obtained by one level further increasing the driving energy by adding the unit driving waveform blocks is the driving waveform having the level of an arbitrary slot in the (k+1)th to the (S−k)th slots changed from Ak to Ak+1.
41. The drive circuit according to claim 40, wherein
the slot having the level changed from Ak to Ak+1 is either of the (k+1)th or (S−k)th slot.
US10/167,666 2001-06-15 2002-06-13 Drive circuit, display device, and driving method Expired - Fee Related US6995516B2 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US11/264,162 US7573472B2 (en) 2001-06-15 2005-11-02 Drive circuit, display device, and driving method

Applications Claiming Priority (8)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
JP181841/2001(PAT. 2001-06-15
JP2001181841 2001-06-15
JP248978/2001(PAT. 2001-08-20
JP2001248978 2001-08-20
JP2001296397 2001-09-27
JP296397/2001(PAT. 2001-09-27
JP2002167096A JP3681121B2 (en) 2001-06-15 2002-06-07 Driving circuit and display device
JP167096/2002(PAT. 2002-06-07

Related Child Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US11/264,162 Division US7573472B2 (en) 2001-06-15 2005-11-02 Drive circuit, display device, and driving method

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20020195966A1 true US20020195966A1 (en) 2002-12-26
US6995516B2 US6995516B2 (en) 2006-02-07

Family

ID=27482344

Family Applications (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US10/167,666 Expired - Fee Related US6995516B2 (en) 2001-06-15 2002-06-13 Drive circuit, display device, and driving method
US11/264,162 Expired - Fee Related US7573472B2 (en) 2001-06-15 2005-11-02 Drive circuit, display device, and driving method

Family Applications After (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US11/264,162 Expired - Fee Related US7573472B2 (en) 2001-06-15 2005-11-02 Drive circuit, display device, and driving method

Country Status (5)

Country Link
US (2) US6995516B2 (en)
EP (1) EP1267319A2 (en)
JP (1) JP3681121B2 (en)
KR (3) KR100557183B1 (en)
CN (2) CN100394466C (en)

Cited By (13)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20030025687A1 (en) * 2001-07-31 2003-02-06 Kenji Shino Scanning circuit and image display device
US20040001039A1 (en) * 2002-06-26 2004-01-01 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Driving apparatus, driver circuit, and image display apparatus
US20040217950A1 (en) * 2003-01-30 2004-11-04 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Drive circuit
US20050001827A1 (en) * 2003-05-16 2005-01-06 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Drive control apparatus and drive control method for display panel
US20050009434A1 (en) * 2003-08-15 2005-01-13 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Method for manufacturing image display device, image display device, and TV apparatus
US20050206636A1 (en) * 2004-03-16 2005-09-22 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Image data processing apparatus and image display apparatus
US20050275355A1 (en) * 2004-06-10 2005-12-15 Samuelsson Ulf R Method and system for enhanced dimming resolution in a light ballast through use of multiple control frequencies
US20060001500A1 (en) * 2004-06-30 2006-01-05 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Modulation circuit, driving circuit and output method
US20060001499A1 (en) * 2004-06-30 2006-01-05 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Modulation-signal generator circuit, image display apparatus and television apparatus
US20060290718A1 (en) * 2005-06-24 2006-12-28 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Drive circuit
KR100730261B1 (en) * 2004-09-06 2007-06-20 산요덴키가부시키가이샤 Driving circuit of display device suitable for inorganic electro-luminescence display device
CN100390840C (en) * 2004-06-30 2008-05-28 佳能株式会社 Display apparatus and method for controlling the same
US20100309232A1 (en) * 2009-06-08 2010-12-09 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Control method for image display apparatus

Families Citing this family (29)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
TWI280547B (en) * 2000-02-03 2007-05-01 Samsung Electronics Co Ltd Liquid crystal display and driving method thereof
JP4320413B2 (en) * 2002-09-11 2009-08-26 日本電気株式会社 Semiconductor integrated circuit and layout design apparatus
JP3830888B2 (en) * 2002-12-02 2006-10-11 オプトレックス株式会社 Driving method of organic EL display device
JP4136670B2 (en) * 2003-01-09 2008-08-20 キヤノン株式会社 Matrix panel drive control apparatus and drive control method
JP4012118B2 (en) 2003-05-19 2007-11-21 キヤノン株式会社 Image display device
KR100599649B1 (en) * 2003-11-24 2006-07-12 삼성에스디아이 주식회사 Driving apparatus of plasma display panel
JP2005257791A (en) * 2004-03-09 2005-09-22 Canon Inc Image display apparatus and driving method for same
JP2005292804A (en) * 2004-03-10 2005-10-20 Canon Inc Control device and image display device
KR101022657B1 (en) * 2004-05-31 2011-03-22 삼성에스디아이 주식회사 Driving method of electron emission device
JP4908784B2 (en) * 2004-06-30 2012-04-04 キヤノン株式会社 Display element drive circuit, image display device, and television device
JP4560445B2 (en) 2004-06-30 2010-10-13 キヤノン株式会社 Display device and driving method
CN100428294C (en) * 2004-06-30 2008-10-22 佳能株式会社 Modulation circuit, driving circuit and output method
JP2006186277A (en) * 2004-12-28 2006-07-13 Sanyo Electric Co Ltd Light-emitting element driving device
KR100676190B1 (en) * 2005-05-17 2007-01-30 엘지전자 주식회사 Organic electroluminescent device
KR100732809B1 (en) * 2005-11-03 2007-06-27 삼성에스디아이 주식회사 Data Driver and Organic Light Emitting Display Using the same
US8373355B2 (en) * 2006-11-09 2013-02-12 Apple Inc. Brightness control of a status indicator light
JP4861937B2 (en) * 2007-09-11 2012-01-25 オムロン株式会社 Transmission device, reception device, transmission / reception device, transmission control method, reception control method, optical transmission module, electronic device
JP2009211052A (en) * 2008-02-06 2009-09-17 Canon Inc Drive circuit of display panel and display apparatus
JP2009251046A (en) 2008-04-01 2009-10-29 Canon Inc Image display apparatus and control method of the same
US8456414B2 (en) * 2008-08-01 2013-06-04 Sipix Imaging, Inc. Gamma adjustment with error diffusion for electrophoretic displays
JP2010145739A (en) * 2008-12-18 2010-07-01 Sanyo Electric Co Ltd Light-emitting element driving circuit
JP2011002651A (en) * 2009-06-18 2011-01-06 Canon Inc Image display device and control method of image display device
US8138687B2 (en) * 2009-06-30 2012-03-20 Apple Inc. Multicolor lighting system
JP2013504081A (en) * 2009-09-02 2013-02-04 スコビル インダストリーズ コープ Method and apparatus for driving an electroluminescent display
US8400626B2 (en) 2010-06-10 2013-03-19 Apple Inc. Ambient light sensor
JP2013083826A (en) * 2011-10-11 2013-05-09 Canon Inc Liquid crystal display device, control method of liquid crystal display device
CN103247251B (en) * 2012-02-03 2015-06-03 深圳市明微电子股份有限公司 Integral modulation control method and system for LED driver chip
US10455653B1 (en) * 2018-08-09 2019-10-22 Innolux Corporation LED driving circuits
US11835382B2 (en) 2021-03-02 2023-12-05 Apple Inc. Handheld electronic device

Citations (21)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4904895A (en) * 1987-05-06 1990-02-27 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Electron emission device
US5066883A (en) * 1987-07-15 1991-11-19 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Electron-emitting device with electron-emitting region insulated from electrodes
US5455597A (en) * 1992-12-29 1995-10-03 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Image-forming apparatus, and designation of electron beam diameter at image-forming member in image-forming apparatus
US5477110A (en) * 1994-06-30 1995-12-19 Motorola Method of controlling a field emission device
US5555000A (en) * 1993-07-22 1996-09-10 Commissariat A L'energie Atomique Process and device for the control of a microtip fluorescent display
US5569974A (en) * 1989-03-30 1996-10-29 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Electron-emitting device and electron beam lithograph machine and image display apparatus making use of it
US5593335A (en) * 1993-04-05 1997-01-14 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Method of manufacturing an electron source
US5654607A (en) * 1993-04-05 1997-08-05 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Image forming device and method including surface-conduction electron emitting devices and an electrode array for generating an electron beam
US5659329A (en) * 1992-12-19 1997-08-19 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Electron source, and image-forming apparatus and method of driving the same
US5682085A (en) * 1990-05-23 1997-10-28 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Multi-electron beam source and image display device using the same
US5818403A (en) * 1993-01-07 1998-10-06 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Electron beam-generating apparatus, image-forming apparatus, and driving methods thereof
US6157137A (en) * 1993-01-28 2000-12-05 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Multi-electron beam source with driving circuit for preventing voltage spikes
US6195076B1 (en) * 1996-03-28 2001-02-27 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Electron-beam generating apparatus, image display apparatus having the same, and method of driving thereof
US6294876B1 (en) * 1999-02-24 2001-09-25 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Electron-beam apparatus and image forming apparatus
US6404135B1 (en) * 1999-02-24 2002-06-11 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Electron-beam apparatus and image forming apparatus
US20020154101A1 (en) * 1999-02-26 2002-10-24 Naoto Abe Image display apparatus and image display method
US6489940B1 (en) * 1998-07-31 2002-12-03 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Display device driver IC
US20030025687A1 (en) * 2001-07-31 2003-02-06 Kenji Shino Scanning circuit and image display device
US20030038792A1 (en) * 2001-08-03 2003-02-27 Kazuhiko Murayama Image display apparatus
US20030063108A1 (en) * 2001-09-28 2003-04-03 Aoji Isono Drive signal generator and image display apparatus
US20040001039A1 (en) * 2002-06-26 2004-01-01 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Driving apparatus, driver circuit, and image display apparatus

Family Cites Families (28)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPS6431332A (en) 1987-07-28 1989-02-01 Canon Kk Electron beam generating apparatus and its driving method
JPH0518585Y2 (en) 1987-08-13 1993-05-18
JPH02257551A (en) 1989-03-30 1990-10-18 Canon Inc Image forming device
JP2967288B2 (en) 1990-05-23 1999-10-25 キヤノン株式会社 Multi electron beam source and image display device using the same
JP3165701B2 (en) * 1991-03-06 2001-05-14 キヤノン株式会社 Vibration wave motor
JP2901032B2 (en) 1992-01-31 1999-06-02 京セラ株式会社 LED print head
JP3167072B2 (en) 1992-12-29 2001-05-14 キヤノン株式会社 Image forming device
JP3235893B2 (en) 1993-01-28 2001-12-04 京セラ株式会社 Drive circuit for liquid crystal display
JPH07177446A (en) 1993-12-17 1995-07-14 Matsushita Electric Ind Co Ltd Image display device
CA2138363C (en) * 1993-12-22 1999-06-22 Yasuyuki Todokoro Electron beam generating apparatus, image display apparatus, and method of driving the apparatuses
JPH09101759A (en) * 1995-10-04 1997-04-15 Pioneer Electron Corp Method and device for driving light emitting element
JPH09281928A (en) 1996-04-16 1997-10-31 Pioneer Electron Corp Display device
JPH1039825A (en) 1996-07-23 1998-02-13 Canon Inc Electron generation device, picture display device, and their driving circuit and driving method
JP4059537B2 (en) 1996-10-04 2008-03-12 三菱電機株式会社 Organic thin film EL display device and driving method thereof
JP3027126B2 (en) 1996-11-26 2000-03-27 松下電器産業株式会社 Liquid crystal display
CN2300165Y (en) * 1996-11-27 1998-12-09 矽诚科技股份有限公司 Electroluminescent plate driving device
JPH1115430A (en) 1997-06-19 1999-01-22 Yamaha Corp Electric field emission display device
JP3644240B2 (en) 1998-03-24 2005-04-27 セイコーエプソン株式会社 Digital driver circuit for electro-optical device and electro-optical device including the same
JP3554185B2 (en) 1998-04-03 2004-08-18 キヤノン株式会社 Electron source driving device and image forming apparatus using the same
JP2000148074A (en) * 1998-11-06 2000-05-26 Victor Co Of Japan Ltd Matrix type display device
JP2000172217A (en) 1998-12-09 2000-06-23 Victor Co Of Japan Ltd Matrix type display device
JP2000250471A (en) * 1999-02-25 2000-09-14 Canon Inc Driving device and method for multiple electron source and image forming device
JP3840027B2 (en) * 1999-02-26 2006-11-01 キヤノン株式会社 Image display apparatus and display control method
JP3931470B2 (en) * 1999-03-25 2007-06-13 日本ビクター株式会社 Matrix type display device
JP3815710B2 (en) * 1999-04-28 2006-08-30 矢崎総業株式会社 EL device drive device
US6429840B1 (en) * 1999-09-27 2002-08-06 Citizen Watch Co., Ltd. Method of driving color liquid crystal display panel and method of controlling display of timepiece
US6867755B2 (en) 2000-04-28 2005-03-15 Yazaki Corporation Device and method for driving EL device
JP3755585B2 (en) * 2001-05-11 2006-03-15 セイコーエプソン株式会社 Display controller, display unit, and electronic device

Patent Citations (21)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4904895A (en) * 1987-05-06 1990-02-27 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Electron emission device
US5066883A (en) * 1987-07-15 1991-11-19 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Electron-emitting device with electron-emitting region insulated from electrodes
US5569974A (en) * 1989-03-30 1996-10-29 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Electron-emitting device and electron beam lithograph machine and image display apparatus making use of it
US5682085A (en) * 1990-05-23 1997-10-28 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Multi-electron beam source and image display device using the same
US5659329A (en) * 1992-12-19 1997-08-19 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Electron source, and image-forming apparatus and method of driving the same
US5455597A (en) * 1992-12-29 1995-10-03 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Image-forming apparatus, and designation of electron beam diameter at image-forming member in image-forming apparatus
US5818403A (en) * 1993-01-07 1998-10-06 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Electron beam-generating apparatus, image-forming apparatus, and driving methods thereof
US6157137A (en) * 1993-01-28 2000-12-05 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Multi-electron beam source with driving circuit for preventing voltage spikes
US5654607A (en) * 1993-04-05 1997-08-05 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Image forming device and method including surface-conduction electron emitting devices and an electrode array for generating an electron beam
US5593335A (en) * 1993-04-05 1997-01-14 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Method of manufacturing an electron source
US5555000A (en) * 1993-07-22 1996-09-10 Commissariat A L'energie Atomique Process and device for the control of a microtip fluorescent display
US5477110A (en) * 1994-06-30 1995-12-19 Motorola Method of controlling a field emission device
US6195076B1 (en) * 1996-03-28 2001-02-27 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Electron-beam generating apparatus, image display apparatus having the same, and method of driving thereof
US6489940B1 (en) * 1998-07-31 2002-12-03 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Display device driver IC
US6404135B1 (en) * 1999-02-24 2002-06-11 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Electron-beam apparatus and image forming apparatus
US6294876B1 (en) * 1999-02-24 2001-09-25 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Electron-beam apparatus and image forming apparatus
US20020154101A1 (en) * 1999-02-26 2002-10-24 Naoto Abe Image display apparatus and image display method
US20030025687A1 (en) * 2001-07-31 2003-02-06 Kenji Shino Scanning circuit and image display device
US20030038792A1 (en) * 2001-08-03 2003-02-27 Kazuhiko Murayama Image display apparatus
US20030063108A1 (en) * 2001-09-28 2003-04-03 Aoji Isono Drive signal generator and image display apparatus
US20040001039A1 (en) * 2002-06-26 2004-01-01 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Driving apparatus, driver circuit, and image display apparatus

Cited By (29)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20030025687A1 (en) * 2001-07-31 2003-02-06 Kenji Shino Scanning circuit and image display device
US7126597B2 (en) 2001-07-31 2006-10-24 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Scanning circuit and image display device
US7079123B2 (en) 2002-06-26 2006-07-18 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Driving apparatus, driver circuit, and image display apparatus
US20040001039A1 (en) * 2002-06-26 2004-01-01 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Driving apparatus, driver circuit, and image display apparatus
US7463254B2 (en) 2002-06-26 2008-12-09 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Driving apparatus, driver circuit, and image display apparatus
US20060227078A1 (en) * 2002-06-26 2006-10-12 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Driving apparatus, driver circuit, and image display apparatus
US20040217950A1 (en) * 2003-01-30 2004-11-04 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Drive circuit
US6946799B2 (en) 2003-01-30 2005-09-20 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Drive circuit
US20050001827A1 (en) * 2003-05-16 2005-01-06 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Drive control apparatus and drive control method for display panel
US7154489B2 (en) 2003-05-16 2006-12-26 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Drive control apparatus and drive control method for display panel
US20080227358A1 (en) * 2003-08-15 2008-09-18 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Method for manufacturing image display device, image display device, and tv apparatus
US7390235B2 (en) 2003-08-15 2008-06-24 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Method for manufacturing image display device, image display device, and TV apparatus
US20060192479A1 (en) * 2003-08-15 2006-08-31 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Method for manufacturing image display device, image display device, and TV apparatus
US7794299B2 (en) 2003-08-15 2010-09-14 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Method for manufacturing image display device, image display device, and TV apparatus
US20050009434A1 (en) * 2003-08-15 2005-01-13 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Method for manufacturing image display device, image display device, and TV apparatus
US7088036B2 (en) 2003-08-15 2006-08-08 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Method for manufacturing image display device, image display device, and TV apparatus
US7436413B2 (en) 2004-03-16 2008-10-14 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Image data processing apparatus and image display apparatus
US20050206636A1 (en) * 2004-03-16 2005-09-22 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Image data processing apparatus and image display apparatus
US20050275355A1 (en) * 2004-06-10 2005-12-15 Samuelsson Ulf R Method and system for enhanced dimming resolution in a light ballast through use of multiple control frequencies
US7227317B2 (en) * 2004-06-10 2007-06-05 Atmel Corporation Method and system for enhanced dimming resolution in a light ballast through use of multiple control frequencies
CN100390840C (en) * 2004-06-30 2008-05-28 佳能株式会社 Display apparatus and method for controlling the same
US20060001500A1 (en) * 2004-06-30 2006-01-05 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Modulation circuit, driving circuit and output method
US7468639B2 (en) 2004-06-30 2008-12-23 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Modulation circuit, driving circuit and output method
US7474168B2 (en) 2004-06-30 2009-01-06 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Modulation-signal generator circuit, image display apparatus and television apparatus
US20060001499A1 (en) * 2004-06-30 2006-01-05 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Modulation-signal generator circuit, image display apparatus and television apparatus
KR100730261B1 (en) * 2004-09-06 2007-06-20 산요덴키가부시키가이샤 Driving circuit of display device suitable for inorganic electro-luminescence display device
US20060290718A1 (en) * 2005-06-24 2006-12-28 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Drive circuit
US8077189B2 (en) 2005-06-24 2011-12-13 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Drive circuit
US20100309232A1 (en) * 2009-06-08 2010-12-09 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Control method for image display apparatus

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
CN1402213A (en) 2003-03-12
CN1652173A (en) 2005-08-10
US7573472B2 (en) 2009-08-11
KR100639687B1 (en) 2006-10-31
CN100394466C (en) 2008-06-11
KR20050014779A (en) 2005-02-07
KR100557183B1 (en) 2006-03-03
CN100483494C (en) 2009-04-29
US6995516B2 (en) 2006-02-07
EP1267319A2 (en) 2002-12-18
US20060050030A1 (en) 2006-03-09
KR20020096923A (en) 2002-12-31
KR100802225B1 (en) 2008-02-11
KR20050090118A (en) 2005-09-12
JP3681121B2 (en) 2005-08-10
JP2003173159A (en) 2003-06-20

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US6995516B2 (en) Drive circuit, display device, and driving method
US7397459B2 (en) Image display apparatus and image display method
US6552702B1 (en) Image display apparatus and display control method
US6653794B2 (en) Image display device and method of driving image display device
US6809480B2 (en) Electron-beam apparatus and image forming apparatus
US6515641B1 (en) Image display apparatus and method of driving image display apparatus
US6970162B2 (en) Image display apparatus
US7277105B2 (en) Drive control apparatus and method for matrix panel
JP4560445B2 (en) Display device and driving method
US6369784B1 (en) System and method for improving emitter life in flat panel field emission displays
JP3679784B2 (en) Image display element modulation device and image display device
JP2002311885A (en) Circuit for driving picture display device, picture display device, and method for driving the same
JP2003316312A (en) Driving method of light emitting element
JP2011018012A (en) Control method for image display apparatus
US20090256866A1 (en) Image display apparatus
JP2000267623A (en) Picture displaying method of display device and its driving device
JP2003036050A (en) Image display apparatus and character adjustment method thereof
JP2004206148A (en) Image display device
KR20060095721A (en) Electron emission display apparatus wherein output electric potential of data driver is staged

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AS Assignment

Owner name: CANON KABUSHIKI KAISHA, JAPAN

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNORS:AOKI, TADASHI;KATAKURA, KAZUNORI;ISONO, AOJI;AND OTHERS;REEL/FRAME:013247/0835;SIGNING DATES FROM 20020717 TO 20020722

CC Certificate of correction
FPAY Fee payment

Year of fee payment: 4

REMI Maintenance fee reminder mailed
LAPS Lapse for failure to pay maintenance fees
STCH Information on status: patent discontinuation

Free format text: PATENT EXPIRED DUE TO NONPAYMENT OF MAINTENANCE FEES UNDER 37 CFR 1.362

FP Lapsed due to failure to pay maintenance fee

Effective date: 20140207